The Disappearance of Writing Systems - Perspectives on Literacy and Communication - John Baines

The Disappearance of Writing Systems - Perspectives on Literacy and Communication - John Baines

The Death of Mexican Pictography

The Disappearance of Writing Systems - Perspectives on Literacy and Communication - John Baines

Elizabeth Hill Boone
Tulane University

Description

Mexican pictography—the graphic system of communication used by the Aztecs, Mixtecs, and their neighbours in central and southern Mexico c. AD 1300–1600—is not usually embraced within the term ‘writing’ by specialists in writing systems. This is because, as Houston et al. (2003: 430) have recently noted, Mexican pictography does not have as its goal the recording of speech or ‘meaningful sound’ and thus ‘depart[s] from the linguistic underpinnings that characterize the writing systems of the world’. These scholars further assert that the study of Mexican pictography ‘is not very helpful in understanding heavily phonic systems’. As a specialist in Mexican pictography, I am compelled to argue to the contrary.

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Citation

Boone, Elizabeth. The Death of Mexican Pictography. The Disappearance of Writing Systems - Perspectives on Literacy and Communication. Equinox eBooks Publishing, United Kingdom. p. 253 - 284 Sep 2008. ISBN 9781845539078. https://www.equinoxpub.com/home/view-chapter/?id=19003. Date accessed: 21 Nov 2024 doi: 10.1558/equinox.19003. Sep 2008

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