Writing: Difference between revisions
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{{Short description|Persistent representation of language}} |
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[[File:Rosetta Stone.JPG|thumb|upright=1.2|The [[Rosetta Stone]] (196 BC) bears writing using three different scripts: [[hieroglyphs]] and [[Demotic script]] record the same text in the [[Egyptian language]], while an equivalent passage in [[Greek language|Greek]] uses the [[Greek alphabet]]. These correspondences proved instrumental in the [[decipherment of Egyptian hieroglyphs]] during the early 19th century.]] |
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'''Writing''' is the act of creating a persistent representation of human [[language]]. A [[writing system]] uses a set of symbols and rules to encode aspects of spoken language, such as its [[lexicon]] and [[syntax]]. However, [[written language]] may take on characteristics distinct from those of any spoken language.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Harris |first=Roy |title=Rethinking Writing |publisher=Indiana University Press |year=2000 |isbn=978-0-253-33776-4 |location=Bloomington |pages=185}}</ref> |
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[[Image:Medieval writing desk.jpg|thumb|250px|[[Medieval]] illustration of a [[Christian]] [[scribe]] writing]] |
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'''Writing''' is the representation of [[language]] in a [[text (literary theory)|text]]ual [[Media (arts)|medium]] through the use of a set of signs or symbols (known as a [[writing system]]).<ref>Peter T. Daniels, "The Study of Writing Systems", in ''The World's Writing Systems'', ed. Bright and Daniels, p. 3</ref> It is distinguished from [[illustration]], such as [[cave drawing]] and [[painting]], and non-symbolic preservation of language via non-textual media, such as [[Magnetic tape sound recording|magnetic tape audio]]. |
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Writing is a [[cognitive]] and [[social]] activity involving [[neuropsychological]] and [[Writing process|physical processes]]. The outcome of this activity, also called "writing", and sometimes a "[[Text (literary theory)|text]]", is a series of [[Handwriting|physically inscribed]], [[Printing press|mechanically transferred]], or [[digital data|digitally represented]] symbols. The interpreter or activator of a text is called a "reader".<ref>{{Cite book |last=Smith |first=Dorothy E. |url=https://archive.org/details/institutionaleth0000smit/page/105 |title=Institutional Ethnography: A Sociology for People |publisher=Rowman & Littlefield |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-7591-0502-7 |location=Lanham, MD |pages=[https://archive.org/details/institutionaleth0000smit/page/105 105–108]}}</ref> |
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Writing is an extension of human language across time and space. Writing most likely began as a consequence of political expansion in ancient cultures, which needed reliable means for transmitting information, maintaining financial accounts, keeping historical records, and similar activities. Around the 4th millennium BC, the complexity of trade and administration outgrew the power of memory, and writing became a more dependable method of recording and presenting transactions in a permanent form<ref name="Robinson, 2003, p. 36">Robinson, 2003, p. 36</ref>. In both [[Mesoamerica]] and [[Ancient Egypt]] writing may have evolved through calendrics and a political necessity for recording historical and environmental events. |
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In general, writing systems do not constitute languages in and of themselves, but rather a means of encoding language such that it can be read by others across time and space.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Ong |first=Walter |url=https://archive.org/details/oralityliteracyt00ongw |title=Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word |publisher=Methuen |year=1982 |isbn=978-0-415-02796-0 |location=London |url-access=registration}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Haas |first=Christina |title=Writing technology: Studies on the Materiality of Literacy |publisher=L. Erlbaum Associates |year=1996 |isbn=978-0-8058-1306-7 |location=Mahwah, NJ}}</ref> While not all languages use a writing system, those that do can complement and extend the capacities of [[spoken language]] by creating durable forms of language that can be transmitted across space (e.g. [[Letter (message)|written correspondence]]) and stored over time (e.g. [[libraries]] or other public records).<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Schmandt-Besserat |first1=Denise |title=Handbook of Research on Writing: History, Society, School, Individual, Text |last2=Erard |first2=Erard |publisher=L. Erlbaum Associates |year=2007 |isbn=978-1-135-25111-6 |editor-last=Bazerman |editor-first=Charles |publication-place=New York |page=21 |chapter=Origins and Forms of Writing}}</ref> Writing can also have knowledge-transforming effects, since it allows humans to externalize their thinking in forms that are easier to reflect on, elaborate on, reconsider, and revise.<ref name="Emig (1994)">{{Cite book |title=Landmark Essays: On Writing Across the Curriculum |publisher=Routledge |year=1994 |isbn=978-1-003-05921-9 |editor-last=Bazerman |editor-first=Charles |chapter=Writing as a mode of learning |doi=10.4324/9781003059219 |editor-last2=Russell |editor-first2=David}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |title=Naming What We Know: Threshold Concepts of Writing Studies |publisher=Utah State University Press |year=2015 |isbn=978-0-87421-989-0 |editor-last=Adler-Kassner |editor-first=Linda |location=Logan |pages=55–56 |jstor=j.ctt15nmjt7 |editor-last2=Wardle |editor-first2=Elizabeth A.}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Winsor |first=Dorothy A. |year=1994 |title=Invention and Writing in Technical Work: Representing the Object |journal=Written Communication |volume=11 |issue=2 |pages=227–250 |doi=10.1177/0741088394011002003 |s2cid=145645219}}</ref> |
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==Writing as a category== |
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{{Unreferenced section|date=February 2010}} |
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{{Globalize|date=February 2010}} |
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''Writing'', more particularly, refers to two things: ''writing'' as a [[noun]], the ''thing'' that is written; and ''writing'' as a [[verb]], which designates the ''activity'' of writing. It refers to the [[inscription]] of [[Glyph|characters]] on a medium, thereby forming [[Word (linguistics)|words]], and larger units of [[language]], known as texts. It also refers to the creation of meaning and the [[information]] thereby generated. In that regard, [[linguistics]] (and related [[sciences]]) distinguishes between the [[written language]] and the [[spoken language]]. The significance of the medium by which meaning and information is conveyed is indicated by the distinction made in the arts and sciences. For example, while [[public speaking]] and [[poetry reading]] are both types of [[Speech communication|speech]], the former is governed by the rules of [[rhetoric]] and the latter by [[poetics]]. |
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== Tools, materials, and motivations to write == |
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A person who composes a message or story in the form of text is generally known as a [[writer]] or an [[author]]. However, more specific designations exist which are dictated by the particular nature of the text such as that of [[poet]], [[essayist]], [[novelist]], [[playwright]], [[journalist]], and more. A [[translator]] is a specialized multilingual writer who must fully understand a message written by somebody else in one language; the translator's job is to produce a document of faithfully equivalent message in a completely different language. A person who [[Transcription (linguistics)|transcribes]] or produces text to deliver a message authored by another person is known as a [[scribe]], [[typing|typist]] or [[typesetter]]. A person who produces text with emphasis on the [[aesthetics]] of [[glyph]]s is known as a [[calligrapher]] or [[graphic designer]]. |
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{{See also|Writing implement}} |
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Any instance of writing involves a complex interaction among available tools, intentions, cultural customs, cognitive routines, genres, tacit and explicit knowledge, and the constraints and limitations of the writing system(s) deployed.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Jakobs |first1=Eva-Maria |title=Handbook of writing and text production |last2=Perrin |first2=Daniel |publisher=De Gruyter / Mouton |year=2014 |isbn=978-3-11-022063-6 |page=8 |chapter=Introduction and research roadmap: Writing and text production}}</ref> Inscriptions have been made with [[finger]]s, [[stylus]]es, [[quill]]s, [[ink brush]]es, [[pencil]]s, [[pen]]s, and many styles of [[lithography]]; surfaces used for these inscriptions include [[stone tablet]]s, [[clay tablet]]s, bamboo slats, [[papyrus]], [[wax tablet]]s, [[vellum]], [[parchment]], [[paper]], [[intaglio printing|copperplate]], [[Blackboard|slate]], [[porcelain]], and other [[Whiteboard|enameled surfaces]]. The Incas used knotted cords known as [[quipu]] (or khipu) for keeping records.<ref>{{cite web |title=The Khipu Database Project |url=http://khipukamayuq.fas.harvard.edu/index.html |url-status=live |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110722135315/http://khipukamayuq.fas.harvard.edu/index.html |archive-date=22 July 2011 |access-date=2 November 2008}}</ref> |
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Writing is also a distinctly [[human]] activity. It has been said that a [[monkey]], randomly typing away on a [[typewriter]] (in the days when typewriters replaced the [[pen]] or [[Feather#Utilitarian functions|plume]] as the preferred instrument of writing) could re-create [[Shakespeare]]-- but only if it lived long enough (this is known as the [[infinite monkey theorem]]). Such writing has been speculatively designated as [[coincident]]al. It is also speculated that [[Extraterrestrial life|extraterrestrial]] beings exist who may possess knowledge of writing. At this point in time, the only confirmed writing in existence is of human origin. |
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The [[typewriter]] and subsequently various digital [[word processor]]s have recently become widespread writing tools, and studies have compared the ways in which [[writer]]s have framed the experience of writing with such tools as compared with the pen or pencil.<ref>{{Cite book |title=Observing Writing: Insights from Keystroke Logging and Handwriting |publisher=Brill |year=2019 |isbn=978-90-04-39251-9 |editor-last=Lindgren |editor-first=E. |location=Leiden |editor-last2=Sullivan |editor-first2=K.}}</ref> |
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In Western Culture writing is often only considered as the representation of [[language]] in a [[text (literary theory)|text]]ual [[Media (arts)|medium]] through the use of a set of signs or symbols (known as a [[writing system]]). Writing may use abstract characters that represent phonetic elements of speech, as in Indo-European languages, or it may use simplified representations of objects or concepts, as in east-Asian and ancient Egyptian pictographic writing forms. However, it is distinguished from [[illustration]], such as [[cave drawing]] and [[painting]], and non-symbolic preservation of language via non-textual media, such as [[Magnetic tape sound recording|magnetic tape audio]]. |
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Advancements in [[natural language processing]] and [[natural language generation]] have resulted in software capable of producing certain forms of formulaic writing (e.g., weather forecasts and brief sports reporting) without the direct involvement of humans<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Reiter |first1=Ehud |title=Building Natural Language Generation Systems. |last2=Dale |first2=Robert |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2000 |isbn=978-0511519857}}</ref> after initial configuration or, more commonly, to be used to support writing processes such as generating initial drafts, producing feedback with the help of a rubric, copy-editing, and [[machine translation|helping translation]].<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Katsnelson |first1=Alla |title=Poor English skills? New AIs help researchers to write better |journal=Nature |pages=208–209 |doi=10.1038/d41586-022-02767-9 |date=29 August 2022 |volume=609 |issue=7925 |pmid=36038730 |bibcode=2022Natur.609..208K |s2cid=251931306 |doi-access=free}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |last1=Dzieza |first1=Josh |title=Can AI write good novels? |url=https://www.theverge.com/c/23194235/ai-fiction-writing-amazon-kindle-sudowrite-jasper |access-date=16 November 2022 |work=The Verge |date=20 July 2022 |archive-date=10 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230210114137/https://www.theverge.com/c/23194235/ai-fiction-writing-amazon-kindle-sudowrite-jasper |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title=AI Writing Assistants: A Cure for Writer's Block or Modern-Day Clippy? |url=https://www.pcmag.com/how-to/ai-writing-assistants-a-cure-for-writers-block-or-modern-day-clippy |access-date=16 November 2022 |work=PCMAG |archive-date=23 January 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230123173826/https://www.pcmag.com/how-to/ai-writing-assistants-a-cure-for-writers-block-or-modern-day-clippy |url-status=live}}</ref> |
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==Means for recording information== |
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[[Image:Olin-Warner-LoC-tympanum-Highsmith.jpeg|thumb|upright=1.2|Bronze [[tympanum (architecture)|tympanum]] representing 'Writing', sculpted by [[Olin Levi Warner]] in 1896;<br/>situated above main entrance doors of [[Thomas Jefferson Building]], Washington D.C.]] |
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Wells argues that writing has the ability to "put agreements, laws, commandments on record. It made the growth of states larger than the old city states possible. The command of the priest or king and his seal could go far beyond his sight and voice and could survive his death"<ref>Wells in Robinson, 2003, p. 35</ref>. |
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Writing technologies from different eras coexist easily in many homes and workplaces. During the course of a day or even a single episode of writing, for example, a writer might instinctively switch among a pencil, a touchscreen, a text-editor, a whiteboard, a legal pad, and adhesive notes as different purposes arise.<ref>{{Cite journal |last1=O'Hara |first1=Kenton P. |last2=Taylor |first2=Alex |last3=Newman |first3=William |last4=Sellen |first4=Abigail J. |year=2002 |title=Understanding the materiality of writing from multiple sources |journal=International Journal of Human-Computer Studies |volume=56 |issue=3 |pages=269–305 |doi=10.1006/ijhc.2001.0525}}</ref> |
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=== Motivations and purposes === |
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===Writing systems=== |
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As human societies emerged, collective motivations for the [[development of writing]] were driven by pragmatic exigencies like keeping track of produce and other wealth, recording [[history]], maintaining [[culture]], codifying knowledge through [[curricula]] and lists of texts deemed to contain foundational knowledge (e.g. ''[[The Canon of Medicine]]'') or artistic value (e.g. the [[literary canon]]), organizing and governing societies through texts including [[legal codes]], [[census]] records, [[contract]]s, [[deed]]s of ownership, [[tax]]ation, [[trade agreement]]s, and [[treaties]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Anderson |first=Jack |title=Handbook of Research on Writing: History, Society, School, Individual, Text |year=2008 |publisher=L. Erlbaum Associates |isbn=978-0-8058-4870-0 |editor-last=Bazerman |editor-first=Charles |location=New York |pages=177–190 |chapter=The Collection and Organization of Written Knowledge}}</ref> As [[Charles Bazerman]] explains, the "marking of signs on stones, clay, paper, and now digital memories—each more portable and rapidly traveling than the previous—provided means for increasingly coordinated and extended action as well as memory across larger groups of people over time and space."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bazerman |first=Charles |url=https://wac.colostate.edu/docs/books/literateaction/v2/theory.pdf |title=A Theory of Literate Action |volume=2 |publisher=Parlor |year=2013 |isbn=978-1-602-35477-7 |location=Anderson, SC |pages=193 |chapter=Literacy and the Organization of Society}}</ref> For example, around the 4th millennium BC, the complexity of trade and administration in [[Mesopotamia]] outgrew human memory, and writing became a more dependable method for creating permanent records of transactions.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Green |first=M. W. |year=1981 |title=The Construction and Implementation of the Cuneiform Writing System |journal=Visible Language |volume=15 |issue=4 |pages=345–372 |issn=0022-2224}}</ref> On the other hand, writing in both [[ancient Egypt]] and [[Mesoamerica]] may have evolved through the political necessity to manage the [[calendar]] for recording historical and environmental events.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Ray |first=John D. |year=1986 |title=The Emergence of Writing in Egypt |journal=World Archaeology |volume=17 |issue=3 |pages=307–316 |doi=10.1080/00438243.1986.9979972 |jstor=124697 |issn=0043-8243}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Justeson |first=John S. |year=1986 |title=The Origin of Writing Systems: Preclassic Mesoamerica |journal=World Archaeology |volume=17 |issue=3 |pages=437–458 |doi=10.1080/00438243.1986.9979981 |jstor=124706 |issn=0043-8243}}</ref> Further innovations included more uniform, predictable, and widely dispersed legal systems, the distribution of accessible versions of [[sacred texts]], and furthering practices of [[scientific inquiry]] and [[knowledge management]], all of which were largely reliant on portable and easily reproducible forms of inscribed language. The [[history of writing]] is co-extensive with uses of writing and the elaboration of [[Soft systems methodology#Human activity system|activity systems]] that give rise to and circulate writing. |
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The major [[writing system]]s – methods of inscription – broadly fall into four categories: logographic, syllabic, alphabetic, and featural. Another category, [[ideographic]] (symbols for ideas), has never been developed sufficiently to represent language. A sixth category, [[pictographic]], is insufficient to represent language on its own, but often forms the core of logographies. |
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Individual motivations for writing include improvised additional capacity for the limitations of human [[memory]]<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hutchins |first=Edwin |title=Cognition in the Wild |publisher=MIT Press |year=1995 |isbn=978-0-262-58146-2 |location=Cambridge, MA}}</ref> (e.g. [[Time management|to-do lists]], [[recipe]]s, reminders, [[logbook]]s, [[map]]s, the proper sequence for a complicated task or important [[ritual]]), dissemination of ideas and coordination (e.g. [[essay]]s, [[monograph]]s, [[Broadside (printing)|broadside]]s, [[plan]]s, [[petition]]s, or [[manifesto]]s), creativity and [[storytelling]], maintaining [[kinship]] and other social networks,<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Christiansen |first=M. Sidury |year=2017 |title=Creating a Unique Transnational Place: Deterritorialized Discourse and the Blending of Time and Space in Online Media |journal=Written Communication |volume=34 |issue=2 |pages=135–164 |doi=10.1177/0741088317693996 |s2cid=151827910}}</ref> [[business correspondence]] regarding goods and services, and [[life writing]] (e.g. a [[diary]] or journal).<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Lindenman |first=H. |last2=Driscoll |first2=D. L. |last3=Efthymiou |first3=A. |last4=Pavesich |first4=M. |last5=Reid |first5=J. |date=2024 |title=A Taxonomy of Life Writing: Exploring the Functions of Meaningful Self-Sponsored Writing in Everyday Life. |journal=Written Communication |volume=41 |issue=1 |pages=70-106}}</ref> |
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====Logographies==== |
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A [[logogram]] is a written character which represents a word or [[morpheme]]. The vast number of logograms needed to write a language, and the many years required to learn them, are the major disadvantage of the logographic systems over alphabetic systems. However, the efficiency of reading logographic writing once it is learned is a major advantage.<ref>Smith, Frank. ''Writing and the writer.'' Routledge, 1994, pg. 142.</ref> |
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No writing system is wholly logographic: all have phonetic components as well as logograms ("logosyllabic" components in the case of [[Chinese characters]], [[cuneiform]], and [[Mayan script|Mayan]], where a glyph may stand for a morpheme, a syllable, or both; "logoconsonantal" in the case of hieroglyphs), and many have an ideographic component (Chinese "radicals", hieroglyphic "determiners"). For example, in Mayan, the glyph for "fin", pronounced "ka'", was also used to represent the syllable "ka" whenever the pronunciation of a logogram needed to be indicated, or when there was no logogram. In Chinese, about 90% of characters are compounds of a semantic (meaning) element called a ''radical'' with an existing character to indicate the pronunciation, called a ''phonetic.'' However, such phonetic elements complement the logographic elements, rather than vice versa. |
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The global spread of digital [[communication]] systems such as [[e-mail]] and [[social media]] has made writing an increasingly important feature of daily life, where these systems mix with older technologies like paper, pencils, whiteboards, printers, and copiers.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Sterponi |first1=Laura |last2=Zucchermaglio |first2=Cristina |last3=Alby |first3=Francesca |last4=Fatigante |first4=Marilena |title=Endangered Literacies? Affordances of Paper-Based Literacy in Medical Practice and Its Persistence in the Transition to Digital Technology |journal=Written Communication |date=October 2017 |volume=34 |issue=4 |pages=359–386 |doi=10.1177/0741088317723304 |s2cid=149050969}}</ref> Substantial amounts of everyday writing characterize most workplaces in [[developed countries]].<ref>{{Cite book |last=Brandt |first=Deborah |title=The Rise of Writing |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=2015 |isbn=978-1-107-46211-3}}{{page needed|date=June 2023}}</ref> In many occupations (e.g. law, [[accounting]], [[software design]], [[human resources]]), written documentation is not only the main deliverable but also the mode of work itself.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Jakobs |first1=Eva-Marie |title=Handbook of Writing and Text Production |last2=Spinuzzi |first2=Clay |publisher=De Gruyter Mouton |year=2014 |isbn=978-3-11-022063-6 |page=360 |chapter=Professional Domains: Writing as Creation of Economic Value}}</ref> Even in occupations not typically associated with writing, routine [[records management]] has most employees writing at least some of the time.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Beaufort |first=Anne |title=Handbook of Research on Writing: History, Society, School, Individual, Text |publisher=Lawrence Erlbaum Associates |year=2008 |isbn=978-0-805-84870-0 |location=New York |pages=221–237 |chapter=Writing in the Professions}}</ref> |
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The main logographic system in use today is Chinese characters, used with some modification for various languages of China, Japanese, and, to a lesser extent, Korean in South Korea. Another is the classical [[Yi script]]. |
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== Contemporary uses == |
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====Syllabaries==== |
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Some professions are typically associated with writing, such as literary authors, journalists, and technical writers, but writing is pervasive in most modern forms of work, civic participation, household management, and leisure activities.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Smith |first=Dorothy E. |date=2001 |title=Texts and the ontology of organizations and institutions |journal=Studies in Cultures, Organizations and Societies |volume=7 |issue=2 |pages=160 |doi=10.1080/10245280108523557 |s2cid=146217590}}</ref> |
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A [[syllabary]] is a set of written symbols that represent (or approximate) [[syllable]]s. A glyph in a syllabary typically represents a consonant followed by a vowel, or just a vowel alone, though in some scripts more complex syllables (such as consonant-vowel-consonant, or consonant-consonant-vowel) may have dedicated glyphs. Phonetically related syllables are not so indicated in the script. For instance, the syllable "ka" may look nothing like the syllable "ki", nor will syllables with the same vowels be similar. |
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=== Business and finance === |
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Syllabaries are best suited to languages with relatively simple syllable structure, such as Japanese. Other languages that use syllabic writing include the [[Linear B]] script for [[Mycenaean Greek]]; [[Cherokee]]; [[Ndjuka]], an English-based [[creole language]] of [[Surinam]]; and the [[Vai language|Vai]] script of [[Liberia]]. Most logographic systems have a strong syllabic component. [[Ge'ez alphabet|Ethiopic]], though technically an alphabet, has fused consonants and vowels together to the point that it's learned as if it were a syllabary. |
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{{See also|Professional writing|Professional communication}} |
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Writing permeates everyday commerce. For example, in the course of an afternoon, a wholesaler might receive a written inquiry about the availability of a product line, then communicate with suppliers and fabricators through work orders and purchase agreements, correspond via email to affirm shipping availability with a [[drayage]] company, write an invoice, and request proof of receipt in the form of a written signature. At a much larger scale, modern systems of finances, banking, and business rest on many forms of written documents—including written regulations, policies, and procedures; the creation of reports and other monitoring documents to make, evaluate, and provide accountability for decisions and operations; the creation and maintenance of records; internal written communications within departments to coordinate work; written communications that comprise work products presented to other departments and to clients; and external communications to clients and the public.<ref>{{cite book |last=Yates |first=JoAnne |author-link=JoAnne Yates |year=1989 |title=Control through Communication: The Rise of System in American Management |location=Baltimore, MD |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |isbn=978-0-8018-3757-9}}{{page needed|date=June 2023}}</ref><ref>Smart, G. (2006). ''Writing the economy: Activity, genre and technology in the world of banking.'' London: Equinox.{{page needed|date=June 2023}}</ref> Business and financial organizations also rely on many written legal documents, such as contracts, reports to government agencies, tax records, and accounting reports.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Devitt |first=Amy J. |title=Textual Dynamics of the Professions: Historical and Contemporary Studies of Writing in Professional Communities |publisher=University of Wisconsin Press |year=1991 |location=Madison |pages=336–357 |chapter=Intertextuality in Tax Accounting: Generic, Referential, and Functional}}</ref> Financial institutions and markets that hold, transmit, trade, insure, or regulate holdings for clients or other institutions are particularly dependent on written records (though now often in digital form) to maintain the integrity of their roles.<ref>{{cite book |last=Yates |first=JoAnne |author-link=JoAnne Yates |year=2005 |title=Structuring the Information Age: Life Insurance and Technology in the Twentieth Century |location=Baltimore, MD |publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press |isbn=978-0-8018-8086-5}}{{page needed|date=June 2023}}</ref> |
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Many modern systems of government are organized and sanctified through written [[constitution]]s at the national and sometimes state or other organizational levels. Written rules and procedures typically guide the operations of the various branches, departments, and other bodies of government, which regularly produce reports and other documents as work products and to account for their actions. In addition to [[legislature]]s that draft and pass laws, these laws are administered by an [[executive branch]], which can present further written regulations specifying the laws and how they are carried out.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Kerwin |first=Cornelius M. |author-link=Cornelius M. Kerwin |last2=Furlong |first2=Scott R. |year=2019 |title=Rulemaking: How Government Agencies Write Law and Make Policy |edition=5th |publisher=Sage |isbn=978-1-48335-281-7}}{{page needed|date=May 2023}}</ref> Governments at different levels also typically maintain written records on citizens concerning identities, life events such as births, deaths, marriages, and divorces, the granting of licenses for controlled activities, criminal charges, traffic offenses, and other penalties small and large, and tax liability and payments.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2016-08-15 |title=Vital Records |url=https://www.archives.gov/research/vital-records |access-date=2023-02-24 |website=National Archives |archive-date=24 February 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230224225956/https://www.archives.gov/research/vital-records |url-status=live}}</ref> |
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{{See also|History of the alphabet}} |
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=== Science and scholarship === |
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An [[alphabet]] is a small set of symbols, each of which roughly represents or historically represented a phoneme of the language. In a perfectly [[phonology|phonological]] alphabet, the phonemes and letters would correspond perfectly in two directions: a writer could predict the spelling of a word given its pronunciation, and a speaker could predict the pronunciation of a word given its spelling. |
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Research undertaken in [[academic discipline]]s is typically published as articles in journals or within book-length [[monograph]]s. Arguments, experiments, observational data, and other evidence collated in the course of research is represented in writing, and serves as the basis for later work. Data collection and drafting of [[manuscript]]s may be supported by grants, which usually require proposals establishing the value of such work and the need for funding.<ref>{{cite journal |last1=Tardy |first1=Christine M. |title=A Genre System View of the Funding of Academic Research |journal=Written Communication |date=January 2003 |volume=20 |issue=1 |pages=7–36 |doi=10.1177/0741088303253569 |s2cid=5205721}}</ref> The data and procedures are also typically collected in [[lab notebook]]s or other preliminary files.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Latour |first1=Bruno |title=Laboratory Life: The Construction of Scientific Facts |last2=Woolgar |first2=Steve |publisher=Princeton University Press |year=1986 |isbn=0-691-02832-X}}{{page needed|date=June 2023}}</ref> [[Preprint]]s of potential publications may also be presented at academic or disciplinary conferences or on publicly accessible web servers to gain peer feedback and build interest in the work. Prior to official publication, these documents are typically read and evaluated by [[peer review]] from appropriate experts, who determine whether the work is of sufficient value and quality to be published.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Hyland |first=Ken |title=Disciplinary Discourses: Social Interactions in Academic Writing |publisher=University of Michigan Press |year=2004 |isbn=0-472-03024-8 |location=Ann Arbor |pages=1–19}}</ref> |
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Publication does not establish the claims or findings of work as being authoritatively true, only that they are worth the attention of other specialists. As the work appears in review articles, handbooks, textbooks, or other aggregations, and others cite it in the advancement of their own research, does it become codified as contingently reliable knowledge.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Bazerman |first=Charles |title=Shaping written knowledge: The genre and activity of the experimental article in science |publisher=University of Wisconsin Press |year=1988 |location=Madison}}</ref> |
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As languages often evolve independently of their writing systems, and writing systems have been borrowed for languages they were not designed for, the degree to which letters of an alphabet correspond to phonemes of a language varies greatly from one language to another and even within a single language. |
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{{Main|Journalism}} |
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In most of the alphabets of the Mid-East, only consonants are indicated, or vowels may be indicated with optional diacritics. This property originated since the Egyptian times in the hieroglyphs. Such systems are called ''[[abjad]]s'', derived from the Arabic word for "alphabet". |
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News and news reporting are central to citizen engagement and knowledge of many spheres of activity people may be interested in about the state of their community, including the actions and integrity of their governments and government officials, economic trends, natural disasters and responses to them, international geopolitical events, including conflicts, but also sports, entertainment, books, and other leisure activities. While news and newspapers have grown rapidly from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries, the changing economics and ability to produce and distribute news have brought about radical and rapid challenges to journalism and the consequent organization of citizen knowledge and engagement.<ref>{{Cite book|author=Conboy, M. |year=2007 |contribution=Writing and Journalism: Politics, Social Movements, and the Public Sphere |title=Handbook of Research on Writing: History, Society, School, Individual, Text |location=New York |publisher=Routledge |pages=201–216 |isbn=978-0-8058-4869-4 |editor-last=Bazerman |editor-first=Charles |editor-link=Charles Bazerman}}</ref><ref>{{Cite book |last=Perrin |first=Daniel |title=The Linguistics of Newswriting |publisher=John Benjamins |year=2013 |location=Amsterdam |isbn=978-90-272-05278}}{{page needed|date=October 2024}}</ref> These changes have also created challenges for [[journalism ethics]] that have been developed over the past century.<ref>{{Cite book|last=Pavlik |first=John V. |author-link=John V. Pavlik |year=2001 |title=Journalism and New Media |location=New York |publisher=Columbia University Press |isbn=978-0-2311-1482-0 |page=82}}</ref> |
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=====Abugidas===== |
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In most of the alphabets of India and Southeast Asia, vowels are indicated through diacritics or modification of the shape of the consonant. These are called ''[[abugida]]s''. Some abugidas, such as [[Ethiopic]] and [[Canadian Aboriginal syllabics|Cree]], are learned by children as syllabaries, and so are often called "syllabics". However, unlike true syllabaries, there is not an independent glyph for each syllable. |
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=== Education and educational institutions === |
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Sometimes the term "alphabet" is restricted to systems with separate letters for consonants and vowels, such as the [[Latin alphabet]], although abugidas and abjads may also be accepted as alphabets. Because of this use, [[Greek alphabet|Greek]] is often considered to be the first alphabet. |
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Formal education is the social context most strongly associated with the learning of writing, and students may carry these particular associations long after leaving school.<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Wingate |first=Ursula |date=2012 |title='Argument!' helping students understand what essay writing is about |journal=Journal of English for Academic Purposes |volume=11 |issue=2 |pages=145–154 |doi=10.1016/j.jeap.2011.11.001 |s2cid=73669683}}</ref> Alongside the writing that students read (in the forms of textbooks, assigned books, and other instructional materials as well as self-selected books) students do much writing within schools at all levels, on subject exams, in essays, in taking notes, in doing homework, and in [[Writing assessment|formative and summative assessments]]. Some of this is explicitly directed toward the learning of writing, but much is focused more on subject learning.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Klein |first1=Perry D. |title=Handbook of Writing Research |last2=Arcon |first2=Nina |last3=Baker |first3=Samanta |publisher=Guilford |year=2016 |isbn=978-1-4625-2243-9 |edition=2nd |location=New York |pages=245–246 |chapter=Writing to Learn}}</ref><ref name="Williams et al. (2019)">{{cite journal |vauthors=Williams C, Beam S |date=2019 |title=Technology and writing: review of research |journal=Computers & Education |volume=128 |pages=227–242 |doi=10.1016/j.compedu.2018.09.024 |s2cid=53746020}}</ref> |
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== Writing systems == |
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====Featural scripts==== |
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{{main|Writing system}} |
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A featural script notates the building blocks of the phonemes that make up a language. For instance, all sounds pronounced with the lips ("labial" sounds) may have some element in common. In the Latin alphabet, this is accidentally the case with the letters "b" and "p"; however, labial "m" is completely dissimilar, and the similar-looking "q" is not labial. In Korean [[hangul]], however, all four labial consonants are based on the same basic element. However, in practice, Korean is learned by children as an ordinary alphabet, and the featural elements tend to pass unnoticed. |
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Writing systems may be broadly classified according to what units of language are represented by its symbols: ''[[alphabet]]s'' and ''[[syllabaries]]'' generally represent a language's sounds of speech ([[phoneme]]s and [[syllable]]s respectively)—while ''[[logographies]]'' represent a language's units of meaning ([[word]]s or [[morpheme]]s), though these are still associated by readers with their given pronunciations in the corresponding spoken language.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book |title=The World's Writing Systems |year=1996 |publisher=Oxford University Press |first1=Peter T. |last1=Daniels |first2=William |last2=Bright |isbn=0-19-507993-0 |location=New York |pages=59}}</ref>{{sfn|Rogers|2005|pp=13–15}} |
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===Logographies=== |
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Another featural script is [[SignWriting]], the most popular writing system for many [[sign languages]], where the shapes and movements of the hands and face are represented [[secular icon|iconically]]. Featural scripts are also common in fictional or invented systems, such as [[J.R.R. Tolkien|Tolkien's]] [[Tengwar]]. |
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[[File:Comparative evolution of Cuneiform, Egyptian and Chinese characters.svg|thumb|Comparative evolution from pictograms to abstract shapes, in Mesopotamian [[cuneiform]]s, [[Egyptian hieroglyph]]s and [[Chinese characters]]]] |
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A logography is written using [[logogram]]s—written characters which represent individual [[word]]s or [[morpheme]]s.<ref name=":0" /> For example, in Mayan, the glyph for "fin", pronounced ''ka'', was also used to represent the syllable ''ka'' whenever the pronunciation of a logogram needed to be indicated. Many logograms have an [[ideographic]] component (Chinese "radicals", hieroglyphic "determiners"). In Chinese, about 90% of characters are compounds of a semantic (meaning) element called a ''radical'' with an existing character to indicate the pronunciation, called a ''phonetic''. However, such phonetic elements complement the logographic elements, rather than vice versa.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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The main logographic system in use today is [[Chinese characters]], used with some modification for the various languages or dialects of [[languages of China|China]], [[languages of Japan|Japan]], and sometimes in [[Korean language|Korean]], although in [[South Korea|South]] and [[North Korea]], the phonetic [[Hangul]] system is mainly used. Other logographic systems include [[cuneiform]] and [[Maya script|Maya]].{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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====Historical significance of writing systems==== |
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[[Image:Olin-Warner-LoC-tympanum-Highsmith.jpeg|thumb|300px|[[Olin Levi Warner]], [[tympanum (architecture)|tympanum]] representing Writing, above exterior of main entrance doors, [[Thomas Jefferson Building]], Washington DC, 1896.]] |
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===Syllabaries=== |
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Historians draw a distinction between prehistory and history, with history defined by the advent of writing. The cave paintings and petroglyphs of prehistoric peoples can be considered precursors of writing, but are not considered writing because they did not represent language directly. |
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A [[syllabary]] is a set of written symbols that represent [[syllable]]s,<ref name=":0" /> typically a consonant followed by a vowel, or just a vowel alone. In some scripts more complex syllables (such as consonant-vowel-consonant, or consonant-consonant-vowel) may have dedicated glyphs. Phonetically similar syllables are not written similarly.<ref name=":0" /> For instance, the syllable "ka" may look nothing like the syllable "ki", nor will syllables with the same vowels be similar.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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Syllabaries are best suited to languages with a relatively simple syllable structure, such as Japanese. Other languages that use syllabic writing include [[Mycenaean Greek]] ([[Linear B]]), [[Cherokee syllabary|Cherokee]],<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Cushman |first=Ellen |year=2011 |title=The Cherokee Syllabary: A Writing System in its Own Right |journal=Written Communication |volume=28 |issue=3 |pages=255–281 |doi=10.1177/0741088311410172 |s2cid=144180867}}</ref> the [[Ndyuka language|Ndjuka]] creole language of [[Suriname]], and the [[Vai language]] of [[Liberia]]. |
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Writing systems always develop and change based on the needs of the people who use them. Sometimes the shape, orientation and meaning of individual signs also changes over time. By tracing the development of a script it is possible to learn about the needs of the people who used the script as well as how it changed over time. |
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{{See also| |
{{See also| }} |
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An [[alphabet]] is a set of written symbols that represent [[consonant]]s and [[vowel]]s.<ref name=":0" /> In a perfectly [[phonological]] alphabet, the letters would correspond perfectly to the language's [[phoneme]]s. Thus, a writer could predict the spelling of a word given its pronunciation, and a speaker could predict the pronunciation of a word given its spelling. However, as languages often evolve independently of their writing systems, and writing systems have been borrowed for languages they were not designed for, the degree to which letters of an alphabet correspond to phonemes of a language varies greatly from one language to another and even within a single language.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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The many tools and writing materials used throughout history include [[stone tablets]], [[clay tablet]]s, [[wax tablet]]s, [[vellum]], [[parchment]], [[paper]], [[copperplate]], [[stylus]]es, [[quill]]s, [[ink brush]]es, [[pencil]]s, [[pen]]s, and many styles of [[lithography]]. It is speculated that the Incas might have employed knotted threads known as [[quipu]] (or khipu) as a writing system.<ref>The Khipu Database Project, http://khipukamayuq.fas.harvard.edu/index.html</ref> |
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====Abjads==== |
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The typewriter and various forms of word processors have subsequently become widespread writing tools, and various studies have compared the ways in which writers have framed the experience of writing with such tools as compared with the pen or pencil. |
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In most of the alphabets of the Middle East, it is usually only the consonants of a word that are written, although vowels may be indicated by the addition of various diacritical marks. Writing systems based primarily on writing just consonants phonemes date back to the hieroglyphs of ancient Egypt. Such systems are called ''[[abjad]]s'', derived from the Arabic word for 'alphabet', or ''consonantaries''.<ref name=":0" /> |
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<ref>{{ |
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cite journal |
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<ref>{{ |
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<ref>{{ |
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cite book |
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|location=Aberystwyth |
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|publisher=Prifysgol Cymru |
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}}</ref> |
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====Abugidas==== |
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==History of writing== |
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In most of the alphabets of India and [[Southeast Asia]], vowels are indicated through diacritics or modification of the shape of the consonant. These are called ''[[abugida]]s''.<ref name=":0" /> Some abugidas, such as [[Geʽez script|Geʽez]] and the [[Canadian Aboriginal syllabics]], are learned by children as syllabaries, and so are often called "syllabics". However, unlike true syllabaries, there is not an independent glyph for each syllable.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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{{Main|History of writing}} |
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==History and origins== |
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===The beginning of writing=== |
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{{Main|Proto-writing|List of languages by first written accounts|History of writing}} |
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{{Globalize|date=February 2010}} |
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{{redirect-distinguish|Writings|Ketuvim}} |
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By definition, the modern practice of [[history]] begins with written records; evidence of human culture without writing is the realm of [[prehistory]]. |
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===Mesopotamia=== |
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The writing process first evolved from economic necessity in the ancient near east. Archaeologist [[Denise Schmandt-Besserat]] determined the link between previously uncategorized clay "tokens" and the first known writing, [[cuneiform]].<ref name="Rudgley">{{cite book | title=The Lost Civilizations of the Stone Age| last=Rudgley| first=Richard| authorlink=Richard Rudgley| year=2000| pages=48–57| publisher=Simon & Schuster| location=New York}}</ref> The clay tokens were used to represent commodities, and perhaps even units of [[time]] spent in labor, and their number and type became more complex as civilization advanced. A degree of complexity was reached when over a hundred different kinds of tokens had to be accounted for, and tokens were wrapped and fired in clay, with markings to indicate the kind of tokens inside. These markings soon replaced the tokens themselves, and the clay envelopes were demonstrably the prototype for clay writing tablets.<ref name="Rudgley" /> |
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While research into the development of writing during the [[Neolithic]] is ongoing, the current consensus is that it first evolved from economic necessity in the [[ancient Near East]]. Writing most likely began as a consequence of political expansion in ancient cultures, which needed reliable means for transmitting information, maintaining financial accounts, keeping historical records, and similar activities. Around the 4th millennium BC, the complexity of trade and administration outgrew the power of memory, and writing became a more dependable method of recording and presenting transactions in a permanent form.{{sfn|Robinson|2003|p=36}} |
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The invention of the first writing systems is roughly contemporary with the emergence of civilisations and the beginning of the [[Bronze Age]] during the late 4th millennium BC. [[Cuneiform]] used to write the [[Sumerian language]] and [[Egyptian hieroglyphs]] are generally considered the earliest writing systems, both emerging out of ancestral proto-writing systems between 3400 and 3300 BC,<ref>{{Cite web |title=Where did writing begin? |publisher=British Library |url=https://www.bl.uk/history-of-writing/articles/where-did-writing-begin |access-date=2022-02-28 |archive-date=11 March 2022 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220311085214/https://www.bl.uk/history-of-writing/articles/where-did-writing-begin |url-status=live}}</ref> with earliest coherent texts from {{circa|2600 BC}}. It is generally agreed that Sumerian writing was an independent invention; however, it is debated whether Egyptian writing was developed completely independently of Sumerian, or was a case of [[cultural diffusion]]. |
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Writing is an extension of human language across time and space. Writing most likely began as a consequence of political expansion in ancient cultures, which needed reliable means for transmitting information, maintaining financial accounts, keeping historical records, and similar activities. Around the 4th millennium BC, the complexity of trade and administration outgrew the power of memory, and writing became a more dependable method of recording and presenting transactions in a permanent form<ref name="Robinson, 2003, p. 36"/>. In both [[Mesoamerica]] and [[Ancient Egypt]] writing may have evolved through calendrics and a political necessity for recording historical and environmental events. |
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[[File:Accountancy clay envelope Louvre Sb1932.jpg|thumb|upright|Globular envelope with a cluster of accountancy tokens, Uruk period, from [[Susa]]{{snd}}[[Louvre Museum]]]] |
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<!-- [[Image:Caslonsample.jpg|thumb|350px|''A Specimend'' of typesdet fonts and languages, by William Caslon, letdter founder; from the 1728 ''[[Cyclopaedia]]''.]]--> |
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Archaeologist [[Denise Schmandt-Besserat]] determined the link between previously uncategorized clay "tokens", the oldest of which have been found in the Zagros region of Iran, and cuneiform, the first known writing.<ref name="Rudgley">{{cite book |title=The Lost Civilizations of the Stone Age |last=Rudgley |first=Richard |author-link=Richard Rudgley |year=2000 |pages=48–57 |publisher=Simon & Schuster |location=New York}}</ref> Around 8000 BC, Mesopotamians began using clay tokens to count their agricultural and manufactured goods. Later they began placing these tokens inside large, hollow clay containers (bulla, or globular envelopes) which were then sealed. The quantity of tokens in each container came to be expressed by impressing, on the container's surface, one picture for each instance of the token inside. They next dispensed with the tokens, relying solely on symbols for the tokens, drawn on clay surfaces. To avoid making a picture for each instance of the same object (for example: 100 pictures of a hat to represent 100 hats), they counted the objects by using various small marks. In this way the Sumerians added "a system for enumerating objects to their incipient system of symbols".{{quote without source|date=June 2023}} |
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===Mesopotamia=== |
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The original [[Mesopotamian]] writing system was derived from this method of keeping accounts, and by the end of the [[4th millennium BC]],<ref>The Origin and Development of the Cuneiform System of Writing, Samuel Noah Kramer, ''Thirty Nine Firsts In Recorded History'' pp 381-383</ref> this had evolved into using a triangular-shaped stylus pressed into soft clay for recording numbers. This was gradually augmented with pictographic writing using a sharp stylus to indicate what was being counted. Round-stylus and sharp-stylus writing was gradually replaced by writing using a wedge-shaped stylus (hence the term [[cuneiform script|cuneiform]]), at first only for [[logogram]]s, but evolved to include phonetic elements by the 29th century BC. Around the 26th century BC, cuneiform began to represent syllables of spoken [[Sumerian language|Sumerian]]. Also in that period, cuneiform writing became a general purpose writing system for logograms, syllables, and numbers, and this script was adapted to another Mesopotamian language, [[Akkadian language|Akkadian]], and from there to others such as [[Hurrian language|Hurrian]], and [[Hittite language|Hittite]]. Scripts similar in appearance to this writing system include those for [[Ugaritic language|Ugaritic]] and [[Old Persian language|Old Persian]]. |
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===China=== |
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{{See|Oracle bone script|Bronzeware script}} |
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In [[China]] historians have found out a lot about the early Chinese dynasties from the written documents left behind. From the [[Shang Dynasty]] most of this writing has survived on bones or bronze implements. Markings on [[turtle]] [[Animal shell|shells]] (used as [[oracle bone]]s) have been carbon-dated to around 1500 BC. Historians have found that the type of [[Media (arts)|media]] used had an effect on what the writing was documenting and how it was used. |
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The original [[Mesopotamian]] writing system was derived {{circa|3200 BC}} from this method of keeping accounts. By the end of the 4th millennium BC,<ref>{{cite book |chapter=The Origin and Development of the Cuneiform System of Writing |first=Samuel Noah |last=Kramer |author-link=Samuel Noah Kramer |title=History Begins at Sumer: Thirty-Nine Firsts in Recorded History |pages=381–383 |isbn=978-0-8122-7812-5 |year=1981 |edition=3rd |publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press}}</ref> the Mesopotamians were using a triangular-shaped stylus pressed into soft clay to record numbers. This system was gradually augmented with using a sharp stylus to indicate what was being counted by means of [[pictographs]]. Round and sharp styluses were gradually replaced for writing by wedge-shaped styluses (hence the term ''cuneiform''), at first only for [[logogram]]s, but by the 29th century BC also for phonetic elements. Around 2700 BC, cuneiform began to represent syllables of spoken Sumerian. About that time, Mesopotamian cuneiform became a general purpose writing system for logograms, syllables, and numbers. This script was adapted to another Mesopotamian language, the East Semitic [[Akkadian language|Akkadian]] ([[Old Assyrian period|Assyrian]] and [[Babylonia]]n) {{circa|2600 BC}}, and then to others such as [[Elamite]], [[Hattian language|Hattian]], [[Hurrian language|Hurrian]] and [[Hittite language|Hittite]]. Scripts similar in appearance to this writing system include those for [[Ugaritic]] and [[Old Persian]]. With the adoption of [[Aramaic]] as the lingua franca of the [[Neo-Assyrian Empire]] (911–609 BC), Old Aramaic was also adapted to Mesopotamian cuneiform. The last cuneiform scripts in Akkadian discovered thus far date from the 1st century AD.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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There have [[Jiahu symbols|recently been discoveries of tortoise-shell carvings]] dating back to c. 6000 BC, but whether or not the carvings are of sufficient complexity to qualify as writing is under debate.<ref>China Daily, 12 June 2003, ''Archaeologists Rewrite History'', http://www.china.org.cn/english/2003/Jun/66806.htm</ref><ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title='Earliest writing' found in China. |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2956925.stm |quote=Signs carved into 8,600-year-old tortoise shells found in China may be the earliest written words, say archaeologists. |publisher=[[BBC]] |accessdate=2008-03-30 | date=2003-04-17}}</ref> If it is deemed to be a written language, writing in China will predate Mesopotamian cuneiform, long acknowledged as the first appearance of writing, by some 2000 years. |
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===Egypt=== |
===Egypt=== |
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[[File:Narmer Palette serpopard side.jpg|upright=0.8|thumbnail|right|[[Narmer Palette]], with the two [[Serpopard]]s representing unification of [[Upper Egypt|Upper]] and [[Lower Egypt]], {{circa|3100 BC}}]] |
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The earliest known [[Egyptian hieroglyph|hieroglyphic]] inscriptions are the [[Narmer Palette]], dating to c.3200 BC, and several recent discoveries that may be slightly older, though the glyphs were based on a much older artistic tradition. The hieroglyphic script was [[logogram|logographic]] with phonetic adjuncts that included an effective [[Egyptian hieroglyph#Script|alphabet]]. |
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The earliest known [[hieroglyphs]] are about 5,200 years old, such as the clay labels of a Predynastic ruler called "Scorpion I" (Naqada IIIA period, {{circa|32nd century BC}}) recovered at Abydos (modern Umm el-Qa'ab) in 1998 or the [[Narmer Palette]], dating to {{circa|3100 BC}}, and several recent discoveries that may be slightly older, though these glyphs were based on a much older artistic rather than written tradition. The hieroglyphic script was [[logographic]] with phonetic adjuncts that included an effective [[Egyptian hieroglyph#Script|alphabet]]. The world's oldest deciphered sentence was found on a seal impression found in the tomb of [[Seth-Peribsen]] at Abydos, which dates from the Second Dynasty (28th or 27th century BC). There are around 800 hieroglyphs dating back to the Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom Eras. By the Greco-Roman period, there are more than 5,000.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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Writing was very important in maintaining the Egyptian empire, and literacy was concentrated among an educated elite of [[scribe]]s. Only people from certain backgrounds were allowed to train to become scribes, in the service of temple, pharaonic, and military authorities. The hieroglyph system was always difficult to learn, but in later centuries was purposely made even more so, as this preserved the scribes' status. |
Writing was very important in maintaining the Egyptian empire, and literacy was concentrated among an educated elite of [[scribe]]s. Only people from certain backgrounds were allowed to train to become scribes, in the service of temple, pharaonic, and military authorities. The hieroglyph system was always difficult to learn, but in later centuries was purposely made even more so, as this preserved the scribes' status. |
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The world's [[Middle Bronze Age alphabets|oldest known alphabet]] appears to have been developed by Canaanite turquoise miners in the Sinai desert around the mid-19th century BC.<ref>[[Orly Goldwasser|Goldwasser, Orly]]. "How the Alphabet Was Born from Hieroglyphs", Biblical Archaeology Review, Mar/Apr 2010</ref> Around 30 crude inscriptions have been found at a mountainous Egyptian mining site known as Serabit el-Khadem. This site was also home to a temple of Hathor, the "Mistress of turquoise". A later, two line inscription has also been found at [[Wadi el-Hol]] in Central Egypt. Based on hieroglyphic prototypes, but also including entirely new symbols, each sign apparently stood for a consonant rather than a word: the basis of an alphabetic system. It was not until the 12th to 9th centuries, however, that the alphabet took hold and became widely used.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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The world's [[Middle Bronze Age alphabets|oldest known alphabet]] was developed in central [[Egypt]] around 2000 BC from a [[hieroglyph]]ic prototype, and over the next 500 years spread to [[Canaan]] and eventually to the rest of the world. |
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The [[Cascajal Block]], a stone slab with 3,000-year-old proto-writing, was discovered in the Mexican state of [[Veracruz]] and is an example of the oldest script in the Western Hemisphere, preceding the oldest [[Zapotec writing]] by approximately 500 years.<ref>{{cite news |first=John Noble |last=Wilford |author-link=John Noble Wilford |title=Writing May Be Oldest in Western Hemisphere |url=https://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/15/science/15writing.html |quote=A stone slab bearing 3,000-year-old writing previously unknown to scholars has been found in the Mexican state of Veracruz, and archaeologists say it is an example of the oldest script ever discovered in the Western Hemisphere. |work=[[The New York Times]] |access-date=30 March 2008 |date=15 September 2006 |archive-date=27 July 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180727145612/https://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/15/science/15writing.html |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first=Helen |last=Briggs |title='Oldest' New World writing found |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5347080.stm |quote=Ancient civilisations in Mexico developed a writing system as early as 900 BC, new evidence suggests. |publisher=BBC |access-date=30 March 2008 |date=14 September 2006 |archive-date=3 April 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080403005953/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5347080.stm |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite journal |last1=Rodríguez Martínez |first1=Maria del Carmen |last2=Ceballos |first2=Ponciano Ortíz |last3=Coe |first3=Michael D. |last4=Diehl |first4=Richard A. |last5=Houston |first5=Stephen D. |last6=Taube |first6=Karl A. |last7=Calderón |first7=Alfredo Delgado |title=Oldest Writing in the New World |journal=Science |date=15 September 2006 |volume=313 |issue=5793 |pages=1610–1614 |doi=10.1126/science.1131492 |pmid=16973873 |bibcode=2006Sci...313.1610R |s2cid=35140904 |quote=A block with a hitherto unknown system of writing has been found in the Olmec heartland of Veracruz, Mexico. Stylistic and other dating of the block places it in the early first millennium before the common era, the oldest writing in the New World, with features that firmly assign this pivotal development to the Olmec civilization of Mesoamerica.}}</ref> It is thought to be [[Olmec]]. |
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{{Main|Indus script}} |
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Of several [[pre-Columbian]] scripts in [[Mesoamerica]], the one that appears to have been best developed, and the only one to be deciphered, is the [[Maya script]]. The earliest inscription identified as Maya dates to the 3rd century BC.<ref name=Saturno2006>{{cite journal |last1=Saturno |first1=William A. |last2=Stuart |first2=David |last3=Beltrán |first3=Boris |title=Early Maya Writing at San Bartolo, Guatemala |journal=Science |date=3 March 2006 |volume=311 |issue=5765 |pages=1281–1283 |doi=10.1126/science.1121745 |pmid=16400112 |bibcode=2006Sci...311.1281S |s2cid=46351994 |doi-access=free}}</ref> Maya writing used logograms complemented by a set of syllabic glyphs, somewhat similar in function to modern Japanese writing. |
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[[Image:The'Ten Indus Scripts' discavered near the northen gateway of the citadel,Dholavira.JPG|thumb|Ten Indus scripts discovered near the northern gate of [[Dholavira]] (perhaps 5,000 years old)]] |
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===Central Asia=== |
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'''Indus script''' refers to short strings of symbols associated with the [[Indus Valley Civilization]] used between 2600–1900 BC. In spite of many attempts at decipherments and claims, it is as yet undeciphered. The script generally refers to that used in the mature Harappan phase, which perhaps evolved from a few signs found in early Harappa after 3500 BC,<ref>Whitehouse, David (1999) ''[http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/334517.stm 'Earliest writing' found]'' BBC</ref>, and was followed by the mature Harappan script. The script is written from right to left,<ref>(Lal 1966)</ref> and sometimes follows a [[boustrophedonic]] style. Since the number of principal signs is about 400-600,<ref>(Wells 1999)</ref> midway between typical logographic and syllabic scripts, many scholars accept the script to be logo-syllabic<ref>(Bryant 2000)</ref> (typically syllabic scripts have about 50-100 signs whereas logographic scripts have a very large number of principal signs). Several scholars maintain that structural analysis indicates an [[agglutinative]] language underlies the script. However, this is contradicted by the occurrence of signs supposedly representing suffixes at the beginning or middle of words. |
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In 2001, archaeologists discovered that there was a civilization in [[Central Asia]] that used writing {{circa|2000 BC}}. An excavation near [[Ashgabat]], the capital of [[Turkmenistan]], revealed an inscription on a piece of stone that was used as a stamp seal.<ref>{{cite news |title=Ancient writing found in Turkmenistan |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/1330705.stm |quote=A previously unknown civilisation was using writing in Central Asia 4,000 years ago, hundreds of years before Chinese writing developed, archaeologists have discovered. An excavation near Ashgabat, the capital of Turkmenistan, revealed an inscription on a piece of stone that seems to have been used as a stamp seal. |publisher=BBC |access-date=30 March 2008 |date=15 May 2001 |archive-date=7 December 2008 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081207141534/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/1330705.stm |url-status=live}}</ref> |
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=== |
====== |
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{{Further|Oracle bone script|Bronzeware script}} |
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Archaeologists have recently discovered that there was a civilization in Central Asia using writing 4,000 years ago. An excavation near [[Ashgabat]], the capital of [[Turkmenistan]], revealed an inscription on a piece of stone that was used as a stamp seal.<ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Ancient writing found in Turkmenistan. |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/1330705.stm |quote=A previously unknown civilisation was using writing in Central Asia 4,000 years ago, hundreds of years before Chinese writing developed, archaeologists have discovered. An excavation near Ashgabat, the capital of Turkmenistan, revealed an inscription on a piece of stone that seems to have been used as a stamp seal. |publisher=[[BBC]] |accessdate=2008-03-30 | date=2001-05-15}}</ref> |
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The earliest surviving examples of writing in China—inscriptions on [[oracle bone]]s, usually tortoise [[plastron]]s and ox [[scapula]]e which were used for divination—date from around 1200 BC, during the [[Late Shang]] period. A small number of bronze inscriptions from the same period have also survived.<ref>{{cite book |title=The Cambridge History of Ancient China |editor1-first=Michael |editor1-last=Loewe |editor2-first=Edward L. |editor2-last=Shaughnessy |location=Cambridge |publisher=Cambridge University Press |year=1999 |isbn=978-0-521-47030-8 |first=William |last=Boltz |chapter=Language and Writing |pages=74–123 |title-link=The Cambridge History of Ancient China}}</ref> |
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In 2003, archaeologists reported discoveries of [[Jiahu symbols|isolated tortoise-shell carvings]] dating back to the 7th millennium BC, but whether or not these symbols are related to the characters of the later oracle bone script is disputed.<ref>{{cite journal |title=Archaeologists Rewrite History |journal=China Daily |date=12 June 2003 |access-date=4 January 2012 |url=http://www.china.org.cn/english/2003/Jun/66806.htm |archive-date=26 October 2018 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181026123513/http://www.china.org.cn/english/2003/Jun/66806.htm |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |title='Earliest writing' found in China |first=Paul |last=Rincon |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2956925.stm |quote=Signs carved into 8,600-year-old tortoise shells found in China may be the earliest written words, say archaeologists |publisher=BBC News |date=17 April 2003 |access-date=4 January 2012 |archive-date=20 March 2012 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120320140538/http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/2956925.stm |url-status=live}}</ref> |
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===Phoenician writing system and descendants=== |
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The [[Phoenician script|Phoenician writing system]] was adapted from the Proto-Caananite script in around the 11th century BC, which in turn borrowed ideas from [[Egyptian hieroglyphics]]. This writing system was an [[abjad]] — that is, a [[writing system]] in which only consonants are represented. This script was adapted by the [[Greek alphabet|Greeks]], who adapted certain consonantal signs to represent their vowels. The [[Cumae alphabet]], a [[variant]] of the early Greek alphabet gave rise to the [[Etruscan alphabet]], and its own descendants, such as the [[Latin alphabet]] and [[Rune]]s. Other descendants from the [[Greek alphabet]] include the [[Cyrillic alphabet]], used to write [[Russian language|Russian]], among others. The Phoenician system was also adapted into the [[Aramaic script]], from which the [[Hebrew script]] and also that of [[Arabic script|Arabic]] are descended. |
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===Elamite scripts=== |
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The [[Tifinagh]] script (Berber languages) is descended from the Libyco-Berber script which is assumed to be of Phoenician origin. |
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Over the centuries, three distinct Elamite scripts developed. |
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[[Proto-Elamite]] is the oldest known writing system from Iran. In use only briefly ({{circa|3200|2900 BC}}), clay tablets with Proto-Elamite writing have been found at different sites across Iran, with the majority having been excavated at [[Susa]], an ancient city located east of the [[Tigris]] and between the Karkheh and Dez Rivers.<ref>{{cite book |doi=10.4324/9781315658032-20 |chapter=The proto-Elamite writing system |title=The Elamite World |year=2018 |last1=Dahl |first1=Jacob L. |pages=383–396 |isbn=978-1-315-65803-2}}</ref> The Proto-Elamite script is thought to have developed from early [[cuneiform]] (proto-cuneiform). The Proto-Elamite script consists of more than 1,000 signs and is thought to be partly [[logographic]]. |
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[[Linear Elamite]] is a writing system attested in a few monumental inscriptions in Iran. It was used for a very brief period during the last quarter of the 3rd millennium BC. It is often claimed that Linear Elamite is a syllabic writing system derived from Proto-Elamite, although this cannot be proven since Linear-Elamite has not been deciphered. Several scholars have attempted to decipher the script, most notably {{ill|Walther Hinz|de}}<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hinz |first=Walther |date=1975 |title=Problems of Linear Elamite |journal=The Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society of Great Britain and Ireland |volume=107 |issue=2 |pages=106–115 |doi=10.1017/S0035869X00132782 |jstor=25203649}}</ref> and [[:it:Piero Meriggi|Piero Meriggi]]. |
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===Mesoamerica=== |
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A stone slab with 3,000-year-old writing was discovered in the Mexican state of Veracruz, and is an example of the oldest script in the Western Hemisphere preceding the oldest [[Zapotec civilization|Zapotec]] writing dated to about 500 BC.<ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Writing May Be Oldest in Western Hemisphere. |url=http://www.nytimes.com/2006/09/15/science/15writing.html |quote=A stone slab bearing 3,000-year-old writing previously unknown to scholars has been found in the Mexican state of Veracruz, and archaeologists say it is an example of the oldest script ever discovered in the Western Hemisphere. |publisher=[[New York Times]] |accessdate=2008-03-30 | date=2006-09-15}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title='Oldest' New World writing found |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/5347080.stm |quote=Ancient civilisations in Mexico developed a writing system as early as 900 BC, new evidence suggests. |publisher=[[BBC]] |accessdate=2008-03-30 | date=2006-09-14}}</ref><ref>{{cite news |first= |last= |authorlink= |coauthors= |title=Oldest Writing in the New World |url=http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/content/abstract/313/5793/1610 |quote=A block with a hitherto unknown system of writing has been found in the Olmec heartland of Veracruz, Mexico. Stylistic and other dating of the block places it in the early first millennium before the common era, the oldest writing in the New World, with features that firmly assign this pivotal development to the Olmec civilization of Mesoamerica. |publisher=[[Science]] |date= |accessdate=2008-03-30 }}</ref> It is thought to be [[Olmec]]. |
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The [[Elamite cuneiform]] script was used from about 2500 to 331 BC, and was adapted from the Akkadian cuneiform. At any given point within this period, the Elamite cuneiform script consisted of about 130 symbols, and over this entire period only 206 total signs were used. This is far fewer than most other cuneiform scripts.<ref name=":0" /> |
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Of several [[pre-Columbian]] scripts in [[Mesoamerica]], the one that appears to have been best developed, and the only one to be deciphered, is the [[Maya script]]. The earliest inscriptions which are identifiably Maya date to the 3rd century BC, and writing was in continuous use until shortly after the arrival of the Spanish conquistadores in the 16th century AD. Maya writing used logograms complemented by a set of syllabic glyphs, somewhat similar in function to modern Japanese writing. |
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===Europe=== |
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==Creation of text or information== |
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====Crete and Greece==== |
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{{See|Literature}} |
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{{Further|Cretan hieroglyphs|Linear A|Linear B}} |
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[[File:Botticelli Sant'Agostino.jpg|thumb|[[St. Augustine]] writing, revising, and re-writing: [[Sandro Botticelli]]'s ''[[St. Augustine in His Cell (Botticelli)|St. Augustine in His Cell]]'' ]] |
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[[Cretan hieroglyphs]] are found on artifacts of [[Crete]] (early-to-mid-2nd millennium BC, MM I to MM III, overlapping with Linear A from MM IIA at the earliest). [[Linear B]], the writing system of the [[Mycenaean Greeks]],<ref name=Olivier>{{cite journal |last1=Olivier |first1=J.-P. |title=Cretan writing in the second millennium B.C. |journal=World Archaeology |date=February 1986 |volume=17 |issue=3 |pages=377–389 |doi=10.1080/00438243.1986.9979977 |s2cid=163509308}}</ref> has been deciphered while [[Linear A]] has yet to be deciphered. The sequence and the geographical spread of the three overlapping, but distinct writing systems can be summarized as follows (beginning date refers to first attestations, the assumed origins of all scripts lie further back in the past): Cretan hieroglyphs were used in Crete from {{circa|1625}} to 1500 BC; Linear A was used in the [[Aegean Islands]] ([[Kea (island)|Kea]], [[Kythera]], [[Melos]], [[Thera]]), and the [[Greek mainland]] ([[Laconia]]) from {{circa|18th century}} to 1450 BC; and Linear B was used in Crete ([[Knossos]]), and mainland ([[Pylos]], [[Mycenae]], [[Thebes, Greece|Thebes]], [[Tiryns]]) from {{circa|1375}} to 1200 BC.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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===Composition=== |
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{{Main|Composition (language)}} |
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=== |
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{{Main| |
{{Main| }} |
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Indus script refers to short strings of symbols associated with the [[Indus Valley Civilization]] (which spanned modern-day [[Pakistan]] and [[North India]]) used between 2600 and 1900 BC. Despite attempts at [[decipherment]]s and claims, it is as yet undeciphered. The term 'Indus script' is mainly applied to that used in the mature Harappan phase, which perhaps evolved from a few signs found in early [[Harappa]] after 3500 BC.<ref>{{cite news |last1=Whitehouse |first1=David |title='Earliest writing' found |url=http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/334517.stm |publisher=BBC News |date=4 May 1999}}</ref> The script is written from right to left,{{sfn|Mukhopadhyay|2019|page= 2}} and sometimes follows a [[boustrophedonic]] style. In 2015, the epigrapher Bryan Wells estimated there were around 694 distinct signs.{{sfn|Wells|2015|page=13}} This is above 400, so scholars accept the script to be logo-syllabic{{sfn|Stiebing|Helft|2018|page=104–105}} (typically syllabic scripts have about 50–100 signs whereas logographic scripts have a very large number of principal signs). Several scholars maintain that structural analysis indicates an [[agglutinative]] language underlies the script.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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===Author=== |
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{{Main|Author}} |
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===Phoenician writing system and descendants=== |
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===Writer=== |
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The [[Proto-Sinaitic]] script, in which [[Proto-Canaanite]] is believed to have been first written, is attested as far back as the 19th century BC. The [[Phoenician writing system]] was adapted from the Proto-Canaanite script sometime before the 14th century BC, which in turn borrowed principles of representing phonetic information from [[Egyptian hieroglyphs]]. This writing system was an odd sort of syllabary in which only consonants are represented. This script was adapted by the [[Greek alphabet|Greeks]], who adapted certain consonantal signs to represent their vowels. The [[Cumae alphabet]], a variant of the early Greek alphabet, gave rise to the [[Etruscan alphabet]] and its own descendants, such as the [[Latin alphabet]] and [[Rune]]s. Other descendants from the [[Greek alphabet]] include [[Cyrillic]], used to write [[Bulgarian language|Bulgarian]], [[Russian language|Russian]] and [[Serbian language|Serbian]], among others. The Phoenician system was also adapted into the [[Aramaic script]], from which the [[Hebrew script|Hebrew]] and the [[Arabic script]]s are descended.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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{{Main|Writer}} |
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The [[Tifinagh]] script (Berber languages) is descended from the [[Libyco-Berber script]], which is assumed to be of Phoenician origin.{{citation needed|date=June 2023}} |
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===Critiques=== |
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{{Main|Peer Critique}} |
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===Religious texts=== |
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{{Wikibooks|Fiction technique}} |
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{{See also|History of writing#Writing and religion|Myth}} |
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In the [[history of writing]], [[religious texts]] or writing have played a special role. For example, some religious text compilations have been some of the earliest popular texts,<!--, introduced societal rules {{see above|[[#Governance and law|above]]}},--> or even the only written texts in some languages, and in some cases are still highly popular around the world.<ref>{{cite book |last1=Martin |first1=Henri-Jean |title=The History and Power of Writing |date=1994 |publisher=University of Chicago Press |isbn=978-0-226-50836-8}}{{page needed|date=June 2023}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Johnston |first1=Sarah Iles |title=Ancient Religions |date=30 September 2007 |publisher=Harvard University Press |isbn=978-0-674-26477-9 |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=FSEsEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA133 |access-date=2 March 2023 |archive-date=26 April 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230426224052/https://books.google.com/books?id=FSEsEAAAQBAJ&pg=PA133 |url-status=live}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |last1=Powell |first1=Barry B. |title=Writing: Theory and History of the Technology of Civilization |year=2009 |publisher=John Wiley & Sons |isbn=978-1-4051-6256-2 |page=12}}</ref> The first books printed widely using the [[printing press]] [[Gutenberg Bible|were bibles]]. |
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Such texts enabled rapid spread and maintenance of societal cohesion, [[collective identity]], motivations, justifications and [[belief]]s that e.g. notably [[Religious war|historically supported or enabled large-scale warfare between modern humans]]. |
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==See also== |
==See also== |
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{{Portal|Writing}} |
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{| |
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{{columns-list|colwidth=18em| |
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|- valign=top |
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| |
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* [[Asemic writing]] |
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* [[Author]] |
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* [[Boustrophedon text]] |
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* [[Calligraphy]] |
* [[Calligraphy]] |
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* [[Collaborative writing]] |
* [[Collaborative writing]] |
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* [[ |
* [[]] |
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* [[Composition studies]] |
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* [[Copyright Clause]] |
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* [[Creative writing]] |
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* [[Decipherment]] |
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* [[Dyslexia]] |
* [[Dyslexia]] |
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* [[Essay]] |
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* [[Fiction writing]] |
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* [[Grammar]] |
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* [[Graphonomics]] |
* [[Graphonomics]] |
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| |
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* [[Interactive fiction]] |
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* [[Journalism]] |
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* [[Kishotenketsu]] |
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* [[Linguistics]] |
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* [[List of writers' conferences]] |
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* [[Literacy]] |
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* [[Literary award]] |
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* [[Literary criticism]] |
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* [[Literary festival]] |
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* [[Literature]] |
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* [[Manuscript]] |
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* [[Mechanical Pencil]] |
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* [[Orthography]] |
* [[Orthography]] |
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* [[Pencil]] |
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* [[Printing]] |
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| |
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* [[Publishing]] |
* [[Publishing]] |
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* [[Sequoyah#Creation_of_the_syllabary|Creation of the Sequoyah syllabary]] |
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* [[Scriptorium]] |
* [[Scriptorium]] |
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* [[Textual scholarship]] |
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* [[Bible (writing)|Story bible]] |
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* [[Speech communication]] |
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* [[Teaching Writing in the United States]] |
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* [[Typography]] |
* [[Typography]] |
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* [[White papers]] |
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* [[Word processing]] |
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* [[Writer]] |
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* [[Writer's block]] |
* [[Writer's block]] |
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* [[Writing bump]] |
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* [[Writing circle]] |
* [[Writing circle]] |
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* [[Writing |
* [[Writing ]] |
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}} |
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* [[Slate (writing)|Writing slate]] |
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* [[Writing style]] |
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* [[Writing systems]] |
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* [[Writer's voice]] |
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|} |
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==References== |
==References== |
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{{ |
{{}} |
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==Further reading== |
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===Works cited=== |
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{{wikiquote}} |
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{{ |
{{}} |
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* {{Cite book |last=Dooley |first=John F. |title=Software Development, Design and Coding: With Patterns, Debugging, Unit Testing, and Refactoring |edition=2nd |publisher=Apress |year=2017 |doi=10.1007/978-1-4842-3153-1|isbn=978-1-4842-3152-4 }} |
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{{Commons category|People writing}} |
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* {{Cite journal |last=Mukhopadhyay |first=Bahata Ansumali |date=2019 |title=Interrogating Indus inscriptions to unravel their mechanisms of meaning conveyance |journal=Palgrave |volume=5 |issue=1 |pages=1–37 |doi=10.1057/s41599-019-0274-1 |issn=2055-1045 |doi-access=free}} |
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* <Cite>A History of Writing: From Hieroglyph to Multimedia</cite>, edited by Anne-Marie Christin, [http://www.flammarion.com/groupe/ Flammarion] (in French, hardcover: 408 pages, 2002, ISBN 2-08-010887-5) |
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* {{Cite book |last=Robinson |first=Andrew |chapter=The Origins of Writing |editor1-first=David |editor1-last=Crowley |editor2-first=Paul |editor2-last=Heyer |title=Communication in History: Technology, Culture, Society |publisher=Allyn and Bacon |year=2003}} |
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* [http://www.newjewishbooks.org/ITB/ ''In the Beginning: A Short History of the Hebrew Language.''] By Joel M. Hoffman, 2004. [http://www.newjewishbooks.org/ITB/toc.html Chapter 3] covers the invention of writing and its various stages. |
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* {{Cite book |last=Rogers |first=Henry |title=Writing Systems: A Linguistic Approach |publisher=Blackwell |year=2005 |isbn=978-0-631-23463-0 |location=Malden, MA}} |
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* [http://www.ancientscripts.com/ws.html Origins of writing on AncientScripts.com] |
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* {{Cite book |last1=Stiebing |first1=William H. Jr. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=C4U0DwAAQBAJ |title=Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture |last2=Helft |first2=Susan N. |year=2018 |publisher=Routledge |isbn=978-1-134-88083-6 |edition=3rd}} |
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* [http://www.museumofwriting.co.uk/ Museum of Writing]: UK Museum of Writing with information on writing history and implements |
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* {{Cite book |last=Wells |first=B. K. |title=The Archaeology and Epigraphy of Indus Writing |year=2015 |publisher=Archaeopress |isbn=978-1-78491-046-4 |location=Oxford}} |
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* On ERIC Digests: [http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/writing.htm ''Writing Instruction: Current Practices in the Classroom'']; [http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/development.htm ''Writing Development'']; [http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/views.htm ''Writing Instruction: Changing Views over the Years''] |
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{{Refend}} |
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* [http://www.childrenofthecode.org/Tour/c5/index.htm Children of the Code: The Power of Writing - Online Video] |
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*Powell, Barry B., ''Writing: Theory and History of the Technology of Civilization,'' Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 978-14051-6256-2 |
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== Further reading == |
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* Rogers, Henry. 2005. ''Writing Systems: A Linguistic Approach.'' Oxford: Blackwell. ISBN 0-631-23463-2 (hardcover); ISBN 0-631-23464-0 (paperback) |
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{{Refbegin|30em}} |
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* {{cite book|last= Ankerl |first= Guy |title= Global communication without universal civilization |origyear= 2000 |series= INU societal research |volume= Vol.1: Coexisting contemporary civilizations : Arabo-Muslim, Bharati, Chinese, and Western |publisher= INU Press |location= Geneva |isbn= 2-88155-004-5 |pages= 59–66, 235s|year= 2000 }} |
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* {{Cite book |last1=Christin |first1=Anne-Marie |title=A History of Writing: From Hieroglyph to Multimedia |last2=Bacon |first2=Josephine |publisher=Flammarion |year=2002 |isbn=978-2-08-010887-6 |location=Paris}} |
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* Robinson, Andrew "The Origins of Writing" in David Crowley and Paul Heyer (eds) ''Communication in History: Technology, Culture, Society'' (Allyn and Bacon, 2003). |
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* "The Art of Writing" (1974). ''The Book Collector'' 23 no 3 (autumn):319–338. |
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* [https://books.google.com/books?id=momIk7nVNdkC ''In the Beginning: A Short History of the Hebrew Language.''] By Joel M. Hoffman, 2004. Chapter 3 covers the invention of writing and its various stages. |
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* [http://www.museumofwriting.co.uk/ Museum of Writing] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060424070220/http://www.museumofwriting.co.uk/ |date=24 April 2006 }}: UK Museum of Writing with information on writing history and implements |
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* On ERIC Digests: [http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/writing.htm ''Writing Instruction: Current Practices in the Classroom''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304054304/http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/writing.htm |date=4 March 2016 }}; [http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/development.htm ''Writing Development''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20040415092322/http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/development.htm |date=15 April 2004 }}; [http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/views.htm ''Writing Instruction: Changing Views over the Years''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20160304052125/http://www.ericdigests.org/2001-3/views.htm |date=4 March 2016 }} |
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* {{Cite book |last=Powell |first=Barry B. |title=Writing: Theory and History of the Technology of Civilization |publisher=Wiley-Blackwell |year=2009 |isbn=978-1-4051-6256-2 |location=Oxford}} |
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* Reynolds, Jack 2004. ''Merleau-Ponty And Derrida: Intertwining Embodiment And Alterity'', Ohio University Press |
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* {{Cite book |last=Ankerl |first=Guy |editor-last=Pereboom |editor-first=Dirk |title=Global Communication without Universal Civilization, Volume 1: Coexisting Contemporary Civilizations – Arabo-Muslim, Bharati, Chinese, and Western |publisher=INU Press |year=2000 |isbn=978-2-88155-004-1 |series=INU societal research |location=Geneva, Switzerland |pages=59–66, 235s}} |
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{{Refend}} |
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==External links== |
==External links== |
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{{wikiquote}} |
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{{Commons category|Writing}} |
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{{Wikiversity|Collaborative play writing}} |
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{{Wikibooks|Fiction technique}} |
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{{Wiktionary}} |
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* [http://www.uca.edu.ar/esp/sec-ffilosofia/esp/docs-institutos/s-cehao/boletin/damqatum3_eng2007.pdf Language, Writing and Alphabet: An Interview with Christophe Rico] [[Damqatum]] 3 (2007) |
* [http://www.uca.edu.ar/esp/sec-ffilosofia/esp/docs-institutos/s-cehao/boletin/damqatum3_eng2007.pdf Language, Writing and Alphabet: An Interview with Christophe Rico] [[Damqatum]] 3 (2007) |
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* [http://mediengeschichte.dnb.de/DBSMZBN/Web/EN/Navigation/SoundsSymbolsScript/sounds_symbols_script_doorpage.html "Signs – Books – Networks", virtual exhibition of the German Museum of Books and Writing i.a. with a thematic module on sounds, symbols and script] |
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* [http://www.bl.uk/learning/artimages/why/whywrite.html Why write?] - a history of writing and the alphabet from the British Library |
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* [https://wac.colostate.edu Writing Across the Curriculum Clearinghouse] – open access books, journals, teaching resources on research and practice. |
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Latest revision as of 15:51, 6 November 2024
Writing is the act of creating a persistent representation of human language. A writing system uses a set of symbols and rules to encode aspects of spoken language, such as its lexicon and syntax. However, written language may take on characteristics distinct from those of any spoken language.[1]
Writing is a cognitive and social activity involving neuropsychological and physical processes. The outcome of this activity, also called "writing", and sometimes a "text", is a series of physically inscribed, mechanically transferred, or digitally represented symbols. The interpreter or activator of a text is called a "reader".[2]
In general, writing systems do not constitute languages in and of themselves, but rather a means of encoding language such that it can be read by others across time and space.[3][4] While not all languages use a writing system, those that do can complement and extend the capacities of spoken language by creating durable forms of language that can be transmitted across space (e.g. written correspondence) and stored over time (e.g. libraries or other public records).[5] Writing can also have knowledge-transforming effects, since it allows humans to externalize their thinking in forms that are easier to reflect on, elaborate on, reconsider, and revise.[6][7][8]
Tools, materials, and motivations to write
[edit]Any instance of writing involves a complex interaction among available tools, intentions, cultural customs, cognitive routines, genres, tacit and explicit knowledge, and the constraints and limitations of the writing system(s) deployed.[9] Inscriptions have been made with fingers, styluses, quills, ink brushes, pencils, pens, and many styles of lithography; surfaces used for these inscriptions include stone tablets, clay tablets, bamboo slats, papyrus, wax tablets, vellum, parchment, paper, copperplate, slate, porcelain, and other enameled surfaces. The Incas used knotted cords known as quipu (or khipu) for keeping records.[10]
The typewriter and subsequently various digital word processors have recently become widespread writing tools, and studies have compared the ways in which writers have framed the experience of writing with such tools as compared with the pen or pencil.[11]
Advancements in natural language processing and natural language generation have resulted in software capable of producing certain forms of formulaic writing (e.g., weather forecasts and brief sports reporting) without the direct involvement of humans[12] after initial configuration or, more commonly, to be used to support writing processes such as generating initial drafts, producing feedback with the help of a rubric, copy-editing, and helping translation.[13][14][15]
Writing technologies from different eras coexist easily in many homes and workplaces. During the course of a day or even a single episode of writing, for example, a writer might instinctively switch among a pencil, a touchscreen, a text-editor, a whiteboard, a legal pad, and adhesive notes as different purposes arise.[16]
Motivations and purposes
[edit]As human societies emerged, collective motivations for the development of writing were driven by pragmatic exigencies like keeping track of produce and other wealth, recording history, maintaining culture, codifying knowledge through curricula and lists of texts deemed to contain foundational knowledge (e.g. The Canon of Medicine) or artistic value (e.g. the literary canon), organizing and governing societies through texts including legal codes, census records, contracts, deeds of ownership, taxation, trade agreements, and treaties.[17] As Charles Bazerman explains, the "marking of signs on stones, clay, paper, and now digital memories—each more portable and rapidly traveling than the previous—provided means for increasingly coordinated and extended action as well as memory across larger groups of people over time and space."[18] For example, around the 4th millennium BC, the complexity of trade and administration in Mesopotamia outgrew human memory, and writing became a more dependable method for creating permanent records of transactions.[19] On the other hand, writing in both ancient Egypt and Mesoamerica may have evolved through the political necessity to manage the calendar for recording historical and environmental events.[20][21] Further innovations included more uniform, predictable, and widely dispersed legal systems, the distribution of accessible versions of sacred texts, and furthering practices of scientific inquiry and knowledge management, all of which were largely reliant on portable and easily reproducible forms of inscribed language. The history of writing is co-extensive with uses of writing and the elaboration of activity systems that give rise to and circulate writing.
Individual motivations for writing include improvised additional capacity for the limitations of human memory[22] (e.g. to-do lists, recipes, reminders, logbooks, maps, the proper sequence for a complicated task or important ritual), dissemination of ideas and coordination (e.g. essays, monographs, broadsides, plans, petitions, or manifestos), creativity and storytelling, maintaining kinship and other social networks,[23] business correspondence regarding goods and services, and life writing (e.g. a diary or journal).[24]
The global spread of digital communication systems such as e-mail and social media has made writing an increasingly important feature of daily life, where these systems mix with older technologies like paper, pencils, whiteboards, printers, and copiers.[25] Substantial amounts of everyday writing characterize most workplaces in developed countries.[26] In many occupations (e.g. law, accounting, software design, human resources), written documentation is not only the main deliverable but also the mode of work itself.[27] Even in occupations not typically associated with writing, routine records management has most employees writing at least some of the time.[28]
Contemporary uses
[edit]Some professions are typically associated with writing, such as literary authors, journalists, and technical writers, but writing is pervasive in most modern forms of work, civic participation, household management, and leisure activities.[29]
Business and finance
[edit]Writing permeates everyday commerce. For example, in the course of an afternoon, a wholesaler might receive a written inquiry about the availability of a product line, then communicate with suppliers and fabricators through work orders and purchase agreements, correspond via email to affirm shipping availability with a drayage company, write an invoice, and request proof of receipt in the form of a written signature. At a much larger scale, modern systems of finances, banking, and business rest on many forms of written documents—including written regulations, policies, and procedures; the creation of reports and other monitoring documents to make, evaluate, and provide accountability for decisions and operations; the creation and maintenance of records; internal written communications within departments to coordinate work; written communications that comprise work products presented to other departments and to clients; and external communications to clients and the public.[30][31] Business and financial organizations also rely on many written legal documents, such as contracts, reports to government agencies, tax records, and accounting reports.[32] Financial institutions and markets that hold, transmit, trade, insure, or regulate holdings for clients or other institutions are particularly dependent on written records (though now often in digital form) to maintain the integrity of their roles.[33]
Governance and law
[edit]Many modern systems of government are organized and sanctified through written constitutions at the national and sometimes state or other organizational levels. Written rules and procedures typically guide the operations of the various branches, departments, and other bodies of government, which regularly produce reports and other documents as work products and to account for their actions. In addition to legislatures that draft and pass laws, these laws are administered by an executive branch, which can present further written regulations specifying the laws and how they are carried out.[34] Governments at different levels also typically maintain written records on citizens concerning identities, life events such as births, deaths, marriages, and divorces, the granting of licenses for controlled activities, criminal charges, traffic offenses, and other penalties small and large, and tax liability and payments.[35]
Science and scholarship
[edit]Research undertaken in academic disciplines is typically published as articles in journals or within book-length monographs. Arguments, experiments, observational data, and other evidence collated in the course of research is represented in writing, and serves as the basis for later work. Data collection and drafting of manuscripts may be supported by grants, which usually require proposals establishing the value of such work and the need for funding.[36] The data and procedures are also typically collected in lab notebooks or other preliminary files.[37] Preprints of potential publications may also be presented at academic or disciplinary conferences or on publicly accessible web servers to gain peer feedback and build interest in the work. Prior to official publication, these documents are typically read and evaluated by peer review from appropriate experts, who determine whether the work is of sufficient value and quality to be published.[38]
Publication does not establish the claims or findings of work as being authoritatively true, only that they are worth the attention of other specialists. As the work appears in review articles, handbooks, textbooks, or other aggregations, and others cite it in the advancement of their own research, does it become codified as contingently reliable knowledge.[39]
Journalism
[edit]News and news reporting are central to citizen engagement and knowledge of many spheres of activity people may be interested in about the state of their community, including the actions and integrity of their governments and government officials, economic trends, natural disasters and responses to them, international geopolitical events, including conflicts, but also sports, entertainment, books, and other leisure activities. While news and newspapers have grown rapidly from the eighteenth to the twentieth centuries, the changing economics and ability to produce and distribute news have brought about radical and rapid challenges to journalism and the consequent organization of citizen knowledge and engagement.[40][41] These changes have also created challenges for journalism ethics that have been developed over the past century.[42]
Education and educational institutions
[edit]Formal education is the social context most strongly associated with the learning of writing, and students may carry these particular associations long after leaving school.[43] Alongside the writing that students read (in the forms of textbooks, assigned books, and other instructional materials as well as self-selected books) students do much writing within schools at all levels, on subject exams, in essays, in taking notes, in doing homework, and in formative and summative assessments. Some of this is explicitly directed toward the learning of writing, but much is focused more on subject learning.[44][45]
Writing systems
[edit]Writing systems may be broadly classified according to what units of language are represented by its symbols: alphabets and syllabaries generally represent a language's sounds of speech (phonemes and syllables respectively)—while logographies represent a language's units of meaning (words or morphemes), though these are still associated by readers with their given pronunciations in the corresponding spoken language.[46][47]
Logographies
[edit]A logography is written using logograms—written characters which represent individual words or morphemes.[46] For example, in Mayan, the glyph for "fin", pronounced ka, was also used to represent the syllable ka whenever the pronunciation of a logogram needed to be indicated. Many logograms have an ideographic component (Chinese "radicals", hieroglyphic "determiners"). In Chinese, about 90% of characters are compounds of a semantic (meaning) element called a radical with an existing character to indicate the pronunciation, called a phonetic. However, such phonetic elements complement the logographic elements, rather than vice versa.[citation needed]
The main logographic system in use today is Chinese characters, used with some modification for the various languages or dialects of China, Japan, and sometimes in Korean, although in South and North Korea, the phonetic Hangul system is mainly used. Other logographic systems include cuneiform and Maya.[citation needed]
Syllabaries
[edit]A syllabary is a set of written symbols that represent syllables,[46] typically a consonant followed by a vowel, or just a vowel alone. In some scripts more complex syllables (such as consonant-vowel-consonant, or consonant-consonant-vowel) may have dedicated glyphs. Phonetically similar syllables are not written similarly.[46] For instance, the syllable "ka" may look nothing like the syllable "ki", nor will syllables with the same vowels be similar.[citation needed]
Syllabaries are best suited to languages with a relatively simple syllable structure, such as Japanese. Other languages that use syllabic writing include Mycenaean Greek (Linear B), Cherokee,[48] the Ndjuka creole language of Suriname, and the Vai language of Liberia.
Alphabets
[edit]An alphabet is a set of written symbols that represent consonants and vowels.[46] In a perfectly phonological alphabet, the letters would correspond perfectly to the language's phonemes. Thus, a writer could predict the spelling of a word given its pronunciation, and a speaker could predict the pronunciation of a word given its spelling. However, as languages often evolve independently of their writing systems, and writing systems have been borrowed for languages they were not designed for, the degree to which letters of an alphabet correspond to phonemes of a language varies greatly from one language to another and even within a single language.[citation needed]
Abjads
[edit]In most of the alphabets of the Middle East, it is usually only the consonants of a word that are written, although vowels may be indicated by the addition of various diacritical marks. Writing systems based primarily on writing just consonants phonemes date back to the hieroglyphs of ancient Egypt. Such systems are called abjads, derived from the Arabic word for 'alphabet', or consonantaries.[46]
Abugidas
[edit]In most of the alphabets of India and Southeast Asia, vowels are indicated through diacritics or modification of the shape of the consonant. These are called abugidas.[46] Some abugidas, such as Geʽez and the Canadian Aboriginal syllabics, are learned by children as syllabaries, and so are often called "syllabics". However, unlike true syllabaries, there is not an independent glyph for each syllable.[citation needed]
History and origins
[edit]Mesopotamia
[edit]While research into the development of writing during the Neolithic is ongoing, the current consensus is that it first evolved from economic necessity in the ancient Near East. Writing most likely began as a consequence of political expansion in ancient cultures, which needed reliable means for transmitting information, maintaining financial accounts, keeping historical records, and similar activities. Around the 4th millennium BC, the complexity of trade and administration outgrew the power of memory, and writing became a more dependable method of recording and presenting transactions in a permanent form.[49]
The invention of the first writing systems is roughly contemporary with the emergence of civilisations and the beginning of the Bronze Age during the late 4th millennium BC. Cuneiform used to write the Sumerian language and Egyptian hieroglyphs are generally considered the earliest writing systems, both emerging out of ancestral proto-writing systems between 3400 and 3300 BC,[50] with earliest coherent texts from c. 2600 BC. It is generally agreed that Sumerian writing was an independent invention; however, it is debated whether Egyptian writing was developed completely independently of Sumerian, or was a case of cultural diffusion.
Archaeologist Denise Schmandt-Besserat determined the link between previously uncategorized clay "tokens", the oldest of which have been found in the Zagros region of Iran, and cuneiform, the first known writing.[51] Around 8000 BC, Mesopotamians began using clay tokens to count their agricultural and manufactured goods. Later they began placing these tokens inside large, hollow clay containers (bulla, or globular envelopes) which were then sealed. The quantity of tokens in each container came to be expressed by impressing, on the container's surface, one picture for each instance of the token inside. They next dispensed with the tokens, relying solely on symbols for the tokens, drawn on clay surfaces. To avoid making a picture for each instance of the same object (for example: 100 pictures of a hat to represent 100 hats), they counted the objects by using various small marks. In this way the Sumerians added "a system for enumerating objects to their incipient system of symbols".[This quote needs a citation]
The original Mesopotamian writing system was derived c. 3200 BC from this method of keeping accounts. By the end of the 4th millennium BC,[52] the Mesopotamians were using a triangular-shaped stylus pressed into soft clay to record numbers. This system was gradually augmented with using a sharp stylus to indicate what was being counted by means of pictographs. Round and sharp styluses were gradually replaced for writing by wedge-shaped styluses (hence the term cuneiform), at first only for logograms, but by the 29th century BC also for phonetic elements. Around 2700 BC, cuneiform began to represent syllables of spoken Sumerian. About that time, Mesopotamian cuneiform became a general purpose writing system for logograms, syllables, and numbers. This script was adapted to another Mesopotamian language, the East Semitic Akkadian (Assyrian and Babylonian) c. 2600 BC, and then to others such as Elamite, Hattian, Hurrian and Hittite. Scripts similar in appearance to this writing system include those for Ugaritic and Old Persian. With the adoption of Aramaic as the lingua franca of the Neo-Assyrian Empire (911–609 BC), Old Aramaic was also adapted to Mesopotamian cuneiform. The last cuneiform scripts in Akkadian discovered thus far date from the 1st century AD.[citation needed]
Egypt
[edit]The earliest known hieroglyphs are about 5,200 years old, such as the clay labels of a Predynastic ruler called "Scorpion I" (Naqada IIIA period, c. 32nd century BC) recovered at Abydos (modern Umm el-Qa'ab) in 1998 or the Narmer Palette, dating to c. 3100 BC, and several recent discoveries that may be slightly older, though these glyphs were based on a much older artistic rather than written tradition. The hieroglyphic script was logographic with phonetic adjuncts that included an effective alphabet. The world's oldest deciphered sentence was found on a seal impression found in the tomb of Seth-Peribsen at Abydos, which dates from the Second Dynasty (28th or 27th century BC). There are around 800 hieroglyphs dating back to the Old Kingdom, Middle Kingdom and New Kingdom Eras. By the Greco-Roman period, there are more than 5,000.[citation needed]
Writing was very important in maintaining the Egyptian empire, and literacy was concentrated among an educated elite of scribes.[53] Only people from certain backgrounds were allowed to train to become scribes, in the service of temple, pharaonic, and military authorities. The hieroglyph system was always difficult to learn, but in later centuries was purposely made even more so, as this preserved the scribes' status.[citation needed]
The world's oldest known alphabet appears to have been developed by Canaanite turquoise miners in the Sinai desert around the mid-19th century BC.[54] Around 30 crude inscriptions have been found at a mountainous Egyptian mining site known as Serabit el-Khadem. This site was also home to a temple of Hathor, the "Mistress of turquoise". A later, two line inscription has also been found at Wadi el-Hol in Central Egypt. Based on hieroglyphic prototypes, but also including entirely new symbols, each sign apparently stood for a consonant rather than a word: the basis of an alphabetic system. It was not until the 12th to 9th centuries, however, that the alphabet took hold and became widely used.[citation needed]
Mesoamerica
[edit]The Cascajal Block, a stone slab with 3,000-year-old proto-writing, was discovered in the Mexican state of Veracruz and is an example of the oldest script in the Western Hemisphere, preceding the oldest Zapotec writing by approximately 500 years.[55][56][57] It is thought to be Olmec.
Of several pre-Columbian scripts in Mesoamerica, the one that appears to have been best developed, and the only one to be deciphered, is the Maya script. The earliest inscription identified as Maya dates to the 3rd century BC.[58] Maya writing used logograms complemented by a set of syllabic glyphs, somewhat similar in function to modern Japanese writing.
Central Asia
[edit]In 2001, archaeologists discovered that there was a civilization in Central Asia that used writing c. 2000 BC. An excavation near Ashgabat, the capital of Turkmenistan, revealed an inscription on a piece of stone that was used as a stamp seal.[59]
China
[edit]The earliest surviving examples of writing in China—inscriptions on oracle bones, usually tortoise plastrons and ox scapulae which were used for divination—date from around 1200 BC, during the Late Shang period. A small number of bronze inscriptions from the same period have also survived.[60]
In 2003, archaeologists reported discoveries of isolated tortoise-shell carvings dating back to the 7th millennium BC, but whether or not these symbols are related to the characters of the later oracle bone script is disputed.[61][62]
Elamite scripts
[edit]Over the centuries, three distinct Elamite scripts developed. Proto-Elamite is the oldest known writing system from Iran. In use only briefly (c. 3200 – c. 2900 BC), clay tablets with Proto-Elamite writing have been found at different sites across Iran, with the majority having been excavated at Susa, an ancient city located east of the Tigris and between the Karkheh and Dez Rivers.[63] The Proto-Elamite script is thought to have developed from early cuneiform (proto-cuneiform). The Proto-Elamite script consists of more than 1,000 signs and is thought to be partly logographic.
Linear Elamite is a writing system attested in a few monumental inscriptions in Iran. It was used for a very brief period during the last quarter of the 3rd millennium BC. It is often claimed that Linear Elamite is a syllabic writing system derived from Proto-Elamite, although this cannot be proven since Linear-Elamite has not been deciphered. Several scholars have attempted to decipher the script, most notably Walther Hinz[64] and Piero Meriggi.
The Elamite cuneiform script was used from about 2500 to 331 BC, and was adapted from the Akkadian cuneiform. At any given point within this period, the Elamite cuneiform script consisted of about 130 symbols, and over this entire period only 206 total signs were used. This is far fewer than most other cuneiform scripts.[46]
Europe
[edit]Crete and Greece
[edit]Cretan hieroglyphs are found on artifacts of Crete (early-to-mid-2nd millennium BC, MM I to MM III, overlapping with Linear A from MM IIA at the earliest). Linear B, the writing system of the Mycenaean Greeks,[65] has been deciphered while Linear A has yet to be deciphered. The sequence and the geographical spread of the three overlapping, but distinct writing systems can be summarized as follows (beginning date refers to first attestations, the assumed origins of all scripts lie further back in the past): Cretan hieroglyphs were used in Crete from c. 1625 to 1500 BC; Linear A was used in the Aegean Islands (Kea, Kythera, Melos, Thera), and the Greek mainland (Laconia) from c. 18th century to 1450 BC; and Linear B was used in Crete (Knossos), and mainland (Pylos, Mycenae, Thebes, Tiryns) from c. 1375 to 1200 BC.[citation needed]
Indus Valley
[edit]Indus script refers to short strings of symbols associated with the Indus Valley Civilization (which spanned modern-day Pakistan and North India) used between 2600 and 1900 BC. Despite attempts at decipherments and claims, it is as yet undeciphered. The term 'Indus script' is mainly applied to that used in the mature Harappan phase, which perhaps evolved from a few signs found in early Harappa after 3500 BC.[66] The script is written from right to left,[67] and sometimes follows a boustrophedonic style. In 2015, the epigrapher Bryan Wells estimated there were around 694 distinct signs.[68] This is above 400, so scholars accept the script to be logo-syllabic[69] (typically syllabic scripts have about 50–100 signs whereas logographic scripts have a very large number of principal signs). Several scholars maintain that structural analysis indicates an agglutinative language underlies the script.[citation needed]
Phoenician writing system and descendants
[edit]The Proto-Sinaitic script, in which Proto-Canaanite is believed to have been first written, is attested as far back as the 19th century BC. The Phoenician writing system was adapted from the Proto-Canaanite script sometime before the 14th century BC, which in turn borrowed principles of representing phonetic information from Egyptian hieroglyphs. This writing system was an odd sort of syllabary in which only consonants are represented. This script was adapted by the Greeks, who adapted certain consonantal signs to represent their vowels. The Cumae alphabet, a variant of the early Greek alphabet, gave rise to the Etruscan alphabet and its own descendants, such as the Latin alphabet and Runes. Other descendants from the Greek alphabet include Cyrillic, used to write Bulgarian, Russian and Serbian, among others. The Phoenician system was also adapted into the Aramaic script, from which the Hebrew and the Arabic scripts are descended.[citation needed]
The Tifinagh script (Berber languages) is descended from the Libyco-Berber script, which is assumed to be of Phoenician origin.[citation needed]
Religious texts
[edit]In the history of writing, religious texts or writing have played a special role. For example, some religious text compilations have been some of the earliest popular texts, or even the only written texts in some languages, and in some cases are still highly popular around the world.[70][71][72] The first books printed widely using the printing press were bibles. Such texts enabled rapid spread and maintenance of societal cohesion, collective identity, motivations, justifications and beliefs that e.g. notably historically supported or enabled large-scale warfare between modern humans.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Harris, Roy (2000). Rethinking Writing. Bloomington: Indiana University Press. p. 185. ISBN 978-0-253-33776-4.
- ^ Smith, Dorothy E. (2005). Institutional Ethnography: A Sociology for People. Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 105–108. ISBN 978-0-7591-0502-7.
- ^ Ong, Walter (1982). Orality and Literacy: The Technologizing of the Word. London: Methuen. ISBN 978-0-415-02796-0.
- ^ Haas, Christina (1996). Writing technology: Studies on the Materiality of Literacy. Mahwah, NJ: L. Erlbaum Associates. ISBN 978-0-8058-1306-7.
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Works cited
[edit]- Dooley, John F. (2017). Software Development, Design and Coding: With Patterns, Debugging, Unit Testing, and Refactoring (2nd ed.). Apress. doi:10.1007/978-1-4842-3153-1. ISBN 978-1-4842-3152-4.
- Mukhopadhyay, Bahata Ansumali (2019). "Interrogating Indus inscriptions to unravel their mechanisms of meaning conveyance". Palgrave. 5 (1): 1–37. doi:10.1057/s41599-019-0274-1. ISSN 2055-1045.
- Robinson, Andrew (2003). "The Origins of Writing". In Crowley, David; Heyer, Paul (eds.). Communication in History: Technology, Culture, Society. Allyn and Bacon.
- Rogers, Henry (2005). Writing Systems: A Linguistic Approach. Malden, MA: Blackwell. ISBN 978-0-631-23463-0.
- Stiebing, William H. Jr.; Helft, Susan N. (2018). Ancient Near Eastern History and Culture (3rd ed.). Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-88083-6.
- Wells, B. K. (2015). The Archaeology and Epigraphy of Indus Writing. Oxford: Archaeopress. ISBN 978-1-78491-046-4.
Further reading
[edit]- Christin, Anne-Marie; Bacon, Josephine (2002). A History of Writing: From Hieroglyph to Multimedia. Paris: Flammarion. ISBN 978-2-08-010887-6.
- "The Art of Writing" (1974). The Book Collector 23 no 3 (autumn):319–338.
- In the Beginning: A Short History of the Hebrew Language. By Joel M. Hoffman, 2004. Chapter 3 covers the invention of writing and its various stages.
- Museum of Writing Archived 24 April 2006 at the Wayback Machine: UK Museum of Writing with information on writing history and implements
- On ERIC Digests: Writing Instruction: Current Practices in the Classroom Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine; Writing Development Archived 15 April 2004 at the Wayback Machine; Writing Instruction: Changing Views over the Years Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine
- Powell, Barry B. (2009). Writing: Theory and History of the Technology of Civilization. Oxford: Wiley-Blackwell. ISBN 978-1-4051-6256-2.
- Reynolds, Jack 2004. Merleau-Ponty And Derrida: Intertwining Embodiment And Alterity, Ohio University Press
- Ankerl, Guy (2000). Pereboom, Dirk (ed.). Global Communication without Universal Civilization, Volume 1: Coexisting Contemporary Civilizations – Arabo-Muslim, Bharati, Chinese, and Western. INU societal research. Geneva, Switzerland: INU Press. pp. 59–66, 235s. ISBN 978-2-88155-004-1.
External links
[edit]- Language, Writing and Alphabet: An Interview with Christophe Rico Damqatum 3 (2007)
- "Signs – Books – Networks", virtual exhibition of the German Museum of Books and Writing i.a. with a thematic module on sounds, symbols and script
- Writing Across the Curriculum Clearinghouse – open access books, journals, teaching resources on research and practice.