Main Creating Standards: Interactions with Arabic script in 12 manuscript cultures

Creating Standards: Interactions with Arabic script in 12 manuscript cultures

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Open Access Manuscript cultures based on Arabic script feature various tendencies in standardisation of orthography, script types and layout. Unlike previous studies, this book steps outside disciplinary and regional boundaries and provides a typological cross-cultural comparison of standardisation processes in twelve Arabic-influenced writing traditions where different cultures, languages and scripts interact. A wide range of case studies give insights into the factors behind uniformity and variation in Judeo-Arabic in Hebrew script, South Palestinian Christian Arabic, New Persian, Aljamiado of the Spanish Moriscos, Ottoman Turkish, a single multilingual Ottoman manuscript, Sino-Arabic in northwest China, Malay Jawi in the Moluccas, Kanuri and Hausa in Nigeria, Kabyle in Algeria, and Ethiopian Fidäl script as used to transliterate Arabic. One of the findings of this volume is that different domains of manuscript cultures have distinct paths of standardisation, so that orthography tends to develop its own standardisation principles irrespective of norms applied to layout and script types. This book will appeal to readers interested in manuscript studies, sociolinguistics, literacy studies, and history of writing. provides a cross-cultural comparison twelve Arabic-influenced writing traditions in different cultures, scripts and languages insights into the factors of uniformity and variation
Request Code : ZLIBIO3737555
Categories:
Year:
2019
Publisher:
De Gruyter
Language:
English
Pages:
336
ISBN 13:
9783110634983
ISBN:
9783110639063,9783110634983
Series:
Studies in Manuscript Cultures; 16

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