Dorothy Casterline Explained

Dorothy Casterline
Birth Name:Dorothy Chiyoko Sueoka Casterline
Birth Date:27 April 1928
Birth Place:Honolulu, Territory of Hawaii, U.S.
Death Place:Irmo, South Carolina, U.S.
Citizenship:Pacific Islander and American
Spouse:James Casterline
Children:2
Father:Toshie Sueoka
Discipline:Linguist
Sub Discipline:American Sign Language
Workplaces:Gallaudet University
Occupation:Researcher, educator
Mother:Takiyo Sueoka

Dorothy Chiyoko Sueoka Casterline (April 27, 1928 – August 8, 2023) was an American deaf linguist known for her contribution to A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles, considered a foundational work of sign language linguistics.

Life and career

Casterline was born Dorothy Sueoka on April 27, 1928,[1] to parents of Japanese descent, and she grew up in Honolulu, Hawaii.[2] [3] [4] [5] She became deaf at age 14. After graduating from the Hawaii School for the Deaf and the Blind, then known as the Diamond Head School for the Deaf, she obtained a bachelor's degree in English from Gallaudet University in Washington, D.C. in 1958.[6] She was the first deaf Hawaiian student to graduate from Gallaudet. She married fellow alumnus Jim Casterline, and they remained married until his death in 2012.[7] [8]

While at Gallaudet, she and her colleague Carl Croneberg were recruited by the linguist William Stokoe to contribute to their joint work A Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles.[9] Published in 1965, the dictionary is considered a seminal text in the study of ASL, which promoted greater interest in and respect for the language.[10] It was innovative in treating ASL as a real and natural language, rather than a variant of English.[11] Casterline played an important role as a deaf collaborator with the hearing professor Stokoe over the several years it took to produce the dictionary. Stokoe also valued the multicultural makeup of his team, with Casterline's Asian Pacific Islander background and Croneberg's Swedish one.[12] As part of this project, she collaborated with Stokoe and Croneberg beginning in 1960 on a study of the syntax and dialects of American Sign Language under funding provided by the National Science Foundation.[13]

Casterline was living in Laurel, Maryland, as of 1994.[14] In 2022, She was given an honorary doctorate of humane letters from Gallaudet, in recognition of her contributions to ASL linguistics and deaf studies. She died on August 8, 2023, at age 95.[15] [16] [17]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Weinstock . Robert . 2023-08-11 . Dorothy Chiyoko Sueoka Casterline: An appreciation . 2023-08-14 . Gallaudet University . en-US.
  2. Web site: May 2, 2022 . Gallaudet University Commencement Ceremonies Program Book . December 29, 2022 . Gallaudet University . en.
  3. Web site: March 25, 2022 . Deaf/Signing Community: Support Recognition of Dorothy "Dot" Sueoka Casterline . December 29, 2022 . RIT Libraries.
  4. Hochgesang . Julie A. . Miller . Marvin T. . 2016 . A Celebration of the Dictionary of American Sign Language on Linguistic Principles: Fifty Years Later . Sign Language Studies . 16 . 4 . 563–591 . 26191234 . 0302-1475 .
  5. News: January 3, 1994 . Political correctness enters world of deaf . Baltimore Sun.
  6. Web site: Commencement . December 29, 2022 . Gallaudet University . en-US.
  7. Web site: March 29, 2012 . James L. Casterline Jr. . December 29, 2022 . The State.
  8. Web site: Tepe . Heather . October 2, 2002 . Storytelling at the library, American Sign Language-style . December 29, 2022 . Baltimore Sun.
  9. News: Risen . Clay . August 29, 2022 . Carl Croneberg, Explorer of Deaf Culture, Dies at 92 . en-US . The New York Times . December 29, 2022 . 0362-4331.
  10. Book: Skutnabb-Kangas . Tove . The Handbook of Linguistic Human Rights . Phillipson . Robert . November 14, 2022 . John Wiley & Sons . 978-1-119-75390-2 . en.
  11. Sanchez . Rebecca . 2011 . "Human Bodies Are Words": Towards a Theory of Non-Verbal Voice . CEA Critic . 73 . 3 . 33–47 . 44378451 . 0007-8069.
  12. Stokoe . William C. . Dictionary Making, then and Now . 1993 . Sign Language Studies . 79 . 127–146 . 26204580 . 0302-1475.
  13. Book: DSH Abstracts . August 13, 1960 . 149 . Deafness Speech and Hearing Publications.
  14. News: January 3, 1994 . Jennifer . Senior . Language of the Deaf Evolves To Reflect New Sensibilities . en . The New York Times.
  15. Web site: Dorothy Casterline Obituary . August 11, 2023 . Dignity Memorial . en.
  16. Web site: Weinstock . Robert . August 11, 2023 . Dorothy Chiyoko Sueoka Casterline: An appreciation . Gallaudet University . en-US.
  17. News: Risen . Clay . 2023-08-16 . Dorothy Casterline, Who Codified American Sign Language, Dies at 95 . en-US . The New York Times . 2023-08-16 . 0362-4331.