1 / 47

HU 2910 Writing Systems Fall ‘10

HU 2910 Writing Systems Fall ‘10. K yrs ago (BCE). 15K Cave drawings as pictograms 4K Cuneiforms 3K Hieroglyphics 1.5 West Sumerian Syllabary of the Phoenicians 1 Ancient Greeks borrow the Ph’n consonant αβ .75 Etruscans borrow Greek αβ

hawa
Download Presentation

HU 2910 Writing Systems Fall ‘10

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. HU 2910 Writing Systems Fall ‘10

  2. K yrs ago (BCE) • 15K Cave drawings as pictograms • 4K Cuneiforms • 3K Hieroglyphics • 1.5 West Sumerian Syllabary of the Phoenicians • 1 Ancient Greeks borrow the Ph’n consonant αβ • .75 Etruscans borrow Greek αβ • .5 Romans adapt Etruscan-Greco αβto Latin

  3. Seeds of early writing systems • Petroglyphs- early drawings by humans: Altamira (Spain) • Approx 20 K yrs ago • Maybe aesthetic expressions rather than pictorial comm.

  4. Pictograms • Later drawings are clear pictograms

  5. Pictograms • Later drawings are clear pictograms • Unlike modern writing, each picture = a direct image

  6. Pictograms • Later drawings are clear pictograms • Unlike modern writing, each picture = a direct image • A ‘non-arbitrary’ relation b/w form & meaning

  7. Pictograms • Later drawings are clear pictograms • Unlike modern writing, each picture = a direct image • A ‘non-arbitrary’ relation b/w form & meaning • Viz. comic strips sans captions

  8. Pictograms • Later drawings are clear pictograms • Unlike modern writing, each picture = a direct image • A ‘non-arbitrary’ relation b/w form & meaning • Viz. comic strips sans captions • Reps objects directly rather than through linguistic names given to objects

  9. Pictograms • Later drawings are clear pictograms • Unlike modern writing, each picture = a direct image • A ‘non-arbitrary’ relation b/w form & meaning • Viz. comic strips sans captions • Reps objects directly rather than through linguistic names given to objects • They didn’t represent the words & sounds of spoken Lx

  10. Pictograms - universal • Found throughout the world, ancient & modern • Used as int’l road signs • Cf. US Park Service… • “English unnecessary”

  11. Pictograms - universal • Found throughout the world, ancient & modern • Used as int’l road signs • Cf. US Park Service… • “English unnecessary” …or irrelevant

  12. Acceptance extension • Once the representation became ‘standard’ its meaning got extended to attributes of the object or concepts associated with it

  13. Acceptance extension • Once the representation became ‘standard’ its meaning got extended to attributes of the object or concepts associated with it • Pictograms thus began to represent ideas (rather than objects)  ‘ideograms’

  14. Acceptance extension • Once the representation became ‘standard’ its meaning got extended to attributes of the object or concepts associated with it • Pictograms thus began to represent ideas (rather than objects)  ‘ideograms’ • Pict/Id – similar: • Pict: tend to be more literal • Id: less direct

  15. Acceptance extension • Once the representation became ‘standard’ its meaning got extended to attributes of that object or concepts associated with it • Pictograms thus began to represent ideas (rather than objects)  ‘ideograms’ • Pict/Id – similar: • Pict: tend to be more literal • Id: less direct • Cf. No Parking: ‘slanting red line over car’ vs. ‘towtruck removing car’

  16. Standardizing images • Picts/Ids became stylized & formulaic (‘standardizing’) – enabling literacy to expand.

  17. Standardizing images • Picts/Ids became stylized & formulaic (‘standardizing’) – enabling literacy to expand. • The literal reps got so simplified that they lost ‘universality’

  18. Standardizing images • Picts/Ids became stylized & formulaic (‘standardizing’) – enabling literacy to expand. • The literal reps got so simplified that they lost ‘universality’ • Requiring formal study of the system

  19. Standardizing images • Picts/Ids became stylized & formulaic (‘standardizing’) – enabling literacy to expand. • The literal reps got so simplified that they lost ‘universality’ • Requiring formal study of the system • As the ideogram came to stand for the sounds that rep’d the ideas, they became linguistic symbols…

  20. Standardizing images • Picts/Ids became stylized & formulaic (‘standardizing’) – enabling literacy to expand. • The literal reps got so simplified that they lost ‘universality’ • Requiring formal study of the system • As the ideogram came to stand for the sounds that rep’d the ideas, they became linguistic symbols…a revolutionary step

  21. Cuneiform Writing • Sumerians (6K yrs ago) built a civilization in southern Mesopotamia - "meso" < μέσος (middle) + "potamia" < ποταμός (river)

  22. Cuneiform Writing • Sumerians (6K yrs ago) built a civilization in southern Mesopotamia - "meso" < μέσος (middle) + "potamia" < ποταμός (river) • Their W.S. = the oldest one known

  23. Cuneiform Writing • Sumerians (6K yrs ago) built a civilization in southern Mesopotamia - "meso" < μέσος (middle) + "potamia" < ποταμός (river) • Their W.S. = the oldest one known • As commerce grew, so did a need for permanent records

  24. Cuneiform Writing • Sumerians (6K yrs ago) built a civilization in southern Mesopotamia - "meso" < μέσος (middle) + "potamia" < ποταμός (river) • Their W.S. = the oldest one known • As commerce grew, so did a need for permanent records • Elaborate Pict. & system of tallies developed

  25. Cuneiform Writing • Sumerians (6K yrs ago) built a civilization in southern Mesopotamia - "meso" < μέσος (middle) + "potamia" < ποταμός (river) • Their W.S. = the oldest one known • As commerce grew, so did a need for permanent records • Elaborate Pict. & system of tallies developed • They used a wedge-shaped stylus on soft clay tablets • Viz ‘cuneiform’

  26. Logographs • As cuneiform evolved, users started to think of the symbols in terms of the name of the thing being rep’d…

  27. Logographs • As cuneiform evolved, users started to think of the symbols in terms of the name of the thing being rep’d… and not the thing itself.

  28. Logographs • As cuneiform evolved, users started to think of the symbols in terms of the name of the thing being rep’d… and not the thing itself. • When a script begins to represent the words of a language (and not the thing itself), it’s called logographic …the oldest type of writing.

  29. Logographs • As cuneiform evolved, users started to think of the symbols in terms of the name of the thing being rep’d… and not the thing itself. • When a script begins to represent the words of a language (and not the thing itself), it’s called logographic …the oldest type of writing. • Here, the graph stands for both the word & the concept …which it still may resemble

  30. Logographs • As cuneiform evolved, users started to think of the symbols in terms of the name of the thing being rep’d… and not the thing itself. • When a script begins to represent the words of a language (and not the thing itself), it’s called logographic …the oldest type of writing. • Here, the graph stands for both the word & the concept …which it still may resemble • Logograms = ideograms + the word in the Lx for that concept

  31. Cuneiform Writing • This W.S. spread throughout the Middle East & Asia Minor. • Babylonians, Assyrians & Persian borrowed it

  32. Cuneiform Writing • This W.S. spread throughout the Middle East & Asia Minor. • Babylonians, Assyrians & Persian borrowed it • Often using the characters to represent the sounds of syllables in their own Lx.  cuneiform thus evolved into a syllabic W.S.

  33. Cuneiform Writing • This W.S. spread throughout the Middle East & Asia Minor. • Babylonians, Assyrians & Persian borrowed it • Often using the characters to represent the sounds of syllables in their own Lx.  cuneiform thus evolved into a syllabic W.S. • Syllabic W.S • Each syllable is rep’d by its own symbol • Words are written syllable-by-syllable

  34. Cuneiform as syllabic • Though had evolved a syllabic function, it retained many symbols that stood for whole words.

  35. Cuneiform as syllabic • Though had evolved a syllabic function, it retained many symbols that stood for whole words. • Assyrian could write ‘nation’ with one logogram or with syllabic letters. (Cf. modern Japanese)

  36. Cuneiform as syllabic • Though had evolved a syllabic function, it retained many symbols that stood for whole words. • Assyrian could write ‘nation’ with one logogram or with syllabic letters. (Cf. modern Japanese) • In the 6th c. BCE, under Darius, Persia had simplified the ‘alphabet’ (w/ little use of word symbols) …internal logic? (Cf. Hangul)

  37. The Rebus Principle • As a graph loses its visual relationship to the concept it represents, it becomes a phonographic symbol

  38. The Rebus Principle • As a graph loses its visual relationship to the concept it represents, it becomes a phonographic symbol • One graph can then represent all homophones (words with the same sound) • E.g. English? Japanese?

  39. The Rebus Principle • As a graph loses its visual relationship to the concept it represents, it becomes a phonographic symbol • One graph can then represent all homophones (words with the same sound) • E.g. English? Japanese? • A representation of words by pictures of objects whose names sound like the word = a rebus

  40. From Hieroglyphics to the αβ • Circa 4K BCE, as Sumerian pictography thrived, Egypt was using a similar system of their own.

  41. From Hieroglyphics to the αβ • Circa 4K BCE, as Sumerian pictography thrived, Egypt was using a similar system of their own. • H’glyphs (pictograms) came to rep. a concept & the word for said concept …viz. ‘logographic’

  42. From Hieroglyphics to the αβ • Circa 4K BCE, as Sumerian pictography thrived, Egypt was using a similar system of their own. • H’glyphs (pictograms) came to rep. a concept & the word for said concept …viz. ‘logographic’ • Phoenicians (NB a Semitic Lx) lived north of Egypt & west of Sumeria and were likely influenced by both of them. • Circa 1500 BCE – they develop an abjad: • Cs not Vs

  43. From Hieroglyphics to the αβ • Circa 4K BCE, as Sumerian pictography thrived, Egypt was using a similar system of their own. • H’glyphs (pictograms) came to rep. a concept & the word for said concept …viz. ‘logographic’ • Phoenicians (NB a Semitic Lx) lived north of Egypt & west of Sumeria and were likely influenced by both of them. • Circa 1500 BCE – they develop an abjad: • Cs not Vs • Greeks tried to borrow Ph. W.S. but Vs were a problem.

  44. Phoenicia to Greece • In Semitic Lx like Phoenician, vowels can be determined by grammatical context – Greek (like English) is different

  45. Phoenicia to Greece • In Semitic Lx like Phoenician, vowels can be determined by grammatical context – Greek (like English) is different • Phoenician had more consonants than Greek, so they were used as vowels.

  46. Phoenicia to Greece • In Semitic Lx like Phoenician, vowels can be determined by grammatical context – Greek (like English) is different • Phoenician had more consonants than Greek, so they were used as vowels. • Alphabet ‘not invented’ – ‘discovered’ • We brought our intuitive knowledge of the Lx sound system to consciousness: we discovered what we already knew

  47. K yrs ago (BCE) • 15K Cave drawings as pictograms • 4K Cuneiforms • 3K Hieroglyphics • 1.5 West Sumerian Syllabary of the Phoenicians • 1 Ancient Greeks borrow the Ph’n consonant αβ • .75 Etruscans borrow Greek αβ • .5 Romans adapt Etruscan-Greco αβto Latin

More Related