Monday, November 25, 2013

Missing full citations from p. 303 and p. 360

On p. 303, n. 59, the citation to "Rabinovitch and Bradstock 2005" should correspond to the following entry that was omitted from the Bibliography:
Rabinovitch, Judith N., and Timothy Bradstock. 2005. Dance of the Butterflies: Chinese Poetry from the Japanese Court Tradition. Ithaca, NY: Cornell East Asia Series.
Similarly, the citation to "Skjærvø 1996" on p. 360 was meant to point to this missing Bibliography entry:
Skjærvø, P. Oktor. 1996. Aramaic Scripts for Iranian Languages. In The World’s Writing Systems, ed. Peter T. Daniels and William Bright, 515-535. New York: Oxford University Press.

Tuesday, May 15, 2012

Clarification about DeFrancis and Unger's arguments about writing

In arguing that logography plays a central role in the history of writing, in general and in East Asia in particular, Realms opposes what I see as an over-emphasis on phonography by a number of scholars and theorists of writing, most prominently John DeFrancis and J. Marshall Unger.  Our contrasting approaches will be apparent to anyone who compares our work, but I should have provided more detail about their limited acknowledgement of logography.  I do not believe that it is inaccurate to say that they claim that "all writing is necessarily phonographic" (p. 41) or that they insist "on the inherently phonographic nature of all writing" (p. 363), but they do not see all writing as exclusively phonographic.  I should have mentioned that, in writings by Unger, by DeFrancis in the 1990s, and in co-authored essays, they repeatedly concede that actual historical writing systems do incorporate some degree of logography.  We differ profoundly on the extent and significance of that incorporation, but it is not fair to imply that they deny its existence outright.

Chapter in recent edited volume on history of writing

I have a chapter entitled "The Development of Writing in Japan" in The Shape of Script: How and Why Writing Systems Change (ed. Stephen Houston, SAR Press, 2012).  It summarizes several of the central arguments of Realms, especially those made in chapters 4 and 7.

Correction on p. 427

The correct title of Bender 2009 is "Performative Loci of the Imperial Edicts in Nara Japan, 749-70."

Friday, May 11, 2012

37th Annual Lionel Trilling Award

I am more honored than I can say that Realms has been awarded the 37th annual Lionel Trilling Award for best book by a Columbia College faculty member.

Man'yoshu poem index

In what I really hope turns out to be the worst error in Realms, I recently found to my horror that in preparing the index I missed the fact that the Man'yoshu poem number section is ordered by the page numbers of the references, which of course makes it completely useless.  Click here for a link to a properly ordered index (pdf format) to replace the entry on pages 487-488.

Friday, October 7, 2011

Dissertation appendices

Bits and pieces of my 2001 PhD. dissertation are incorporated into the book, and in the few places where the dissertation contains a more detailed discussion there is a note to that effect, but the overall project has changed and expanded so much over the past ten years that I consider the dissertation to have been superseded in almost every respect.  However, the two appendices contain concentrated information that is not available in the book, so I am making them available (unrevised) as supplements here.

Appendix A: The Nihon shoki on Writing's Introduction and Development
Appendix B: Notes on the So-called 'Remnant Texts of the Suiko Court'