SASL Newsletter - Winter 2017 Issue Issue 8 - Winter 2017 | Page 2

SASL Executive Council 2015 – 2017 President Samuel J. Supalla University of Arizona [email protected] Vice President Deirdre Schlehofer Rochester Institute of Technology [email protected] Recording Secretary / Newsletter Editor Andrew P. J. Byrne Framingham State University [email protected] Treasurer Harvey Nathanson Austin Community College [email protected] SASL Journal Editor-in-Chief Jody H. Cripps Towson University [email protected] Members-at-Large Russell Rosen CUNY – Staten Island [email protected] Gabriel Arellano Georgetown University [email protected] Ron Fenicle Montgomery College [email protected] By Andrew P. J. Byrne American Sign Language Literature Now Has a Home! I am pleased to announce that, on December 10, 2017, the SASL Board of Directors voted favoring the inclusion of the American Sign Language Literature Database (ASLLD) in its bylaws along with the SASL Journal and the Power of ASL newsletter. I have gladly accepted the responsibility of a complier for the ASLLD. I anticipate that the ASLLD will be posted on the SASL website in the spring. To better understand the significance of this, I encourage you to read the paper entitled American Sign Language Literature: Some Considerations for Legitimacy and Quality Issues (Byrne, 2017), which was published in the first issue of SASL's journal. One of the topics discussed was the creation of a taxonomy of original works of ASL literature. I briefly described what was called A Database of ASL Literature for Use in the United States and Canada, (now known as The American Sign Language Literature Database), which serves as a resource for scholars, educators, performers, and all other interested parties and individuals to have quick and convenient access to the literary works for recreational, pedagogical, and scholarly purposes. Here, I would like to take an opportunity to elaborate on the database. Currently, the database has 497 original works captured in VHS, DVD, and online publications. It is divided into two main categories: folkloristic and single-authored. The former has four sub-genres: legends, tall tales, riddles, and humor. The total number of traditional works is 49. What is interesting about this category is that there are several works that have several versions signed by different storytellers over the years. For instance, a well-known humorous story entitled The Hitchhiker has eight versions produced from 1981 to 2017. Another well-known instance is the four versions of Timber produced from 1981 to 2015. Another interesting fact about this category is that a humorous story entitled Don’t Sign With Your Hands Full signed by Martina Jo (MJ) Bienvenu in 1980 may be the earliest published recording of folklore in ASL. This story involves a giant in human form scooping a beautiful blonde-haired lady up in his hands. He starts to sign, “You are very beautiful! I am falling in love with you! Can we marry?” But, in the process of signing MARRY, he smashes the lady into pieces. (Continue on the next page) The Power of ASL 2 Winter 2017 – Issue 8