fanf: (weather)
[personal profile] fanf
Over the weekend I read The Alphabet by David Sacks, which is a history (or just-so story) of how our letters came to have their shapes and sounds. It's very readable and informative, and this Guardian review does a good job of summarizing the best bits.

http://books.guardian.co.uk/reviews/referenceandlanguages/0,6121,1112273,00.html

However it is a rather straight-line history. It fails to explore some of the interesting tributaries, such as the divergent shapes of S and Σ or Runic script or the influence of black letter and gothic scripts. The latter is an irritating omission given their brief appearance in the explanation for the shape of lower-case t.

I'd also like to know about the genesis of modern Hebrew and Arabic scripts which have diverged interestingly from our Greek inheritance. And, closer to home, some more comparison between the different sound values used by different languages would have been nice. There's a fair amount about g/j/y (which is required to explain their history) but some more about c/s with maybe something about Cyrillic to give it more context would have been useful.

But perhaps I'm asking a bit too much for a book that's already over 400 pages long.

Date: 2004-12-13 13:40 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vyvyan.livejournal.com
Traditional historical grammars of individual languages usually provide lots of information on script history as well as phonology and grammar, if you're interested in a particular area.

Incidentally, Hebrew and Arabic scripts do not derive from the Greek one (if that was what you meant); rather, they are descended from a Semitic vowelless alphabet which was also the source of the Greek alphabet.

As general textbooks on writing systems, the works by Florian Coulmas and Geoffrey Sampson spring to mind.

Date: 2004-12-14 06:58 (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vyvyan.livejournal.com
You should be able to borrow such books from the UL, though, shouldn't you? (checks quickly) Um, Sampson's Writing Systems is normally borrowable, but seems to be on loan atm (bloody undergrads...); however, Coulmas' Writing Systems of the World is available and unborrowed, in its 1989 edition anyway.

December 2025

S M T W T F S
 123456
78910111213
14151617181920
21222324 252627
28293031   

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated 2025-12-30 20:10
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios