Script Print and Letterforms in Global Contexts: The Visual and the Material

Caroline Archer-Parré, Malcolm Dick, Hazel Wilkinson (Editor), Sahar Afshar (Editor), Darryl Lim (Editor), Vaibhav Singh (Editor)

    Research output: Book/ReportBookpeer-review

    Abstract

    The global history of text-based communication constitutes a particularly exciting facet of material culture, given the myriad ways in which its production, transmission, and consumption has been – and continues to be – accomplished across cultural and political boundaries. However, a critical engagement with script and print outside the western world has remained relatively limited to summaries and generalisations, despite a burgeoning interest in the interrelated areas of printing, publishing, design, and type histories. The time is long overdue for these narratives relating to the material production of text to expand, and address the rich variation and particularity of global practices.

    Covering a variety of scripts and linguistic contexts, this volume explores the plurality of historical and contemporary engagements with, and interpretations of the printed and written word in various artefacts, printing technologies, and writing systems. Part of the Printing History and Culture series by the Centre for Printing History and Culture, this book presents critical perspectives and fresh approaches toward the study of the visual and material aspects of print in diverse linguistic environments – whether handwritten, lithographed, typographically printed, or digitally manifested.
    Original languageEnglish
    Place of PublicationOxford
    PublisherPeter Lang AG
    Number of pages222
    Volume6
    ISBN (Print)978-1-78997-503-1
    Publication statusAccepted/In press (AAM) - 1 Sept 2025

    Publication series

    NamePrinting History & Culture

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