Description
Gibberish seems to have a universal comedic appeal that transcends language barriers – Youtube sensation Crazy Frog goes “bing-ding,” stop-motion penguin Pingu goes “noot-noot,” and Chilean street clown Karcocha speaks in whistle. Clowns don’t need language to make people laugh – Charlie Chaplin did it silently – but what if their gibberish meant something? Intrigued, I sought to explore a species of clowns and how their naturalistic language could evolve the hoots and honks of clown gibberish through naturalistic processes of grammaticalization. First, I evolved a base language (which is not “clown-ish” in itself). Then, I modified the whistled register used by shepherds (not unlike Hmong and Silbo Gomero) into a clown register, which hides the true meaning of jokes in a series of whistles (to encode tone) and other sound effects (to encode consonants). Combined with a clownish subspecies of sapiens and a culture built around “facepaint as self” and humor as a leveling mechanism, this constructed language is vividly clownish. My ultimate intent is to demonstrate the limitless possibility of language change through a detailed, yet silly lens.
Download count: 2
Details
Title
- A Sketch Grammar of Kípíp: A Constructed Clown Language
Contributors
- Steiner, Reed (Author)
- Van Gelderen, Elly (Thesis director)
- Pruitt, Kathryn (Committee member)
- Barrett, The Honors College (Contributor)
- The Design School (Contributor)
- Historical, Philosophical & Religious Studies, Sch (Contributor)
- Department of English (Contributor)
Date Created
The date the item was original created (prior to any relationship with the ASU Digital Repositories.)
2022-05
Subjects
Resource Type
Collections this item is in