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The Story of Writingearly writing systems and deciphering the codes
This will be of interest to anybody interested in the graphical
presentation of language. It's very much a coffee table volume - profusely illustrated and printed on glossy art paper, though Andrew Robinson does spend much of his time wading in archaeological detail. He doesn't claim to be a specialist, and one suspects from time to time that he is offering a digest of other people's work for which he has an amateur enthusiasm.
Some of his exposition is extremely technical, and rather at odds with the populist presentation in which each topic is delivered in double- page spreads. The book also ends rather arbitrarily with a discussion of Chinese and Japanese writing ("the most complicated writing in the world") and the political dilemmas surrounding computerisation and the temptations of the Roman alphabet. It's the sort of publication which would probably be most used in a departmental or college library, but if somebody gave you a copy as a birthday present you wouldn't exactly be disappointed. © Roy Johnson 1996 [more articles on writing skills] Andrew Robinson, The Story of Writing, London: Thames and Hudson, 1995, pp.224, ISBN 0500281564 |
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