Picture of author.

Georges Jean (1920–2011)

Author of Writing: the story of alphabets and scripts

32 Works 979 Members 10 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Includes the name: Georges Jean

Image credit: Uncredited image found at l'anacoluthe.free.fr

Works by Georges Jean

Signs, Symbols and Ciphers (1989) 181 copies
Voyages en Utopie (1994) — Author — 22 copies
Le plaisir des mots (1982) 9 copies
Le livre de tous les pays (1984) 7 copies
JGV 2 copies
Le roman (1971) 2 copies
L'Arbre en poésie (1993) 2 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1920-09-16
Date of death
2011-12-19
Gender
male
Nationality
France
Country (for map)
France
Birthplace
Besançon, France
Occupations
Professor of Linguistics and Semiology, University of Maine, France
Awards and honors
Louise-Lahé

Members

Reviews

Jean covers the development of writing from the distant past to the present day in a fun, easily digestible, comprehensive manner. There's a lot of neat little tidbits here.
 
Flagged
Stevil2001 | 5 other reviews | Oct 10, 2010 |
A small book that explores the evolution of writing systems in many different cultures. The book's strongest point is its illustrations -- lots and lots. Nothing revolutionary here, but those who like this sort of thing will like it. I certainly did
 
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annbury | 5 other reviews | Sep 2, 2010 |
Interesting intoduction, but not a full text: A small book, recapping briefly the history of writing from Akkad and Sumer through the development of printing in the West and China. There are, in fact, two sections: First, the overview of languages and writing, without an overly forceful emphasis on the West, which avoids the taint of cultural bias nicely; second, a group of documents ~ quotations ~ from all sorts of sources, about writing, the alphabets, ideograms, and more. The documents are interesting, though a little confused, especially as regarding the plates that illustrate them; it is not always possible to tell what is what. And the first section is a fascinating overview, well written (or well translated [from the French], it's hard to know with a translation), though with little in it i didn't actually know already. The most important thing that a book of this nature can do is to whet the appetite for more. Consider mine whetted.… (more)
 
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iayork | 5 other reviews | Aug 9, 2009 |
The alphabet has a fascinating history. This book's chief virtue is in its use of well-chosen pictures, usually in color, to illuminate the text.
 
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Kudrun | 5 other reviews | Jul 2, 2009 |

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Associated Authors

Nathalie Harrison Collaboratrice

Statistics

Works
32
Members
979
Popularity
#26,316
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
10
ISBNs
56
Languages
16
Favorited
1

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