Writing of the Americas
This paper aims to highlight the different forms of writing within the Americas, establish connections between the systems, and discuss the impact of European colonization. Writing systems within the American Continents contain a vast array of different indigenous systems that first started around 1...
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ftunivnevadair:oai:scholarworks.unr.edu:11714/7818 2023-08-20T04:07:36+02:00 Writing of the Americas Nolte, Jaycob Clayton, Ian Montoya, Ignacio Ferguson, Jenanne Fridland, Valerie 2021-07-08T19:20:02Z PDF http://hdl.handle.net/11714/7818 unknown http://hdl.handle.net/11714/7818 Abugida Colonizaiton Logographic Writing Mesoamerica Writing Systems Thesis 2021 ftunivnevadair 2023-07-30T16:38:36Z This paper aims to highlight the different forms of writing within the Americas, establish connections between the systems, and discuss the impact of European colonization. Writing systems within the American Continents contain a vast array of different indigenous systems that first started around 1000-900 BCE and spread throughout Mesoamerica into varying communities innovated to make their writing systems. The writing systems discussed are Olmec, Zapotec, Maya, Epi-Olmec, Teotihuacan, Aztec, Mixtec, Khipus, Cree, Cherokee, and Inuktitut writing systems. Primary sources of each system, secondary sources that discuss and synthesize these primary sources, policies, laws, and other cultural materials discussed within these indigenous communities are used throughout the paper to further the discussion. The impact of colonization on the writing systems of the Americas creates a division between pre-and post-contact systems that show the extent of colonial powers. This paper also discusses the writing systems that are still in use and their community's development of revitalization tools and resources. The writing systems of the Americas are an integral part of history, showcasing the people who have lived there for many thousands of years. Thesis inuktitut University of Nevada, Reno: ScholarWorks Repository |
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University of Nevada, Reno: ScholarWorks Repository |
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Abugida Colonizaiton Logographic Writing Mesoamerica Writing Systems |
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Abugida Colonizaiton Logographic Writing Mesoamerica Writing Systems Nolte, Jaycob Writing of the Americas |
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Abugida Colonizaiton Logographic Writing Mesoamerica Writing Systems |
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This paper aims to highlight the different forms of writing within the Americas, establish connections between the systems, and discuss the impact of European colonization. Writing systems within the American Continents contain a vast array of different indigenous systems that first started around 1000-900 BCE and spread throughout Mesoamerica into varying communities innovated to make their writing systems. The writing systems discussed are Olmec, Zapotec, Maya, Epi-Olmec, Teotihuacan, Aztec, Mixtec, Khipus, Cree, Cherokee, and Inuktitut writing systems. Primary sources of each system, secondary sources that discuss and synthesize these primary sources, policies, laws, and other cultural materials discussed within these indigenous communities are used throughout the paper to further the discussion. The impact of colonization on the writing systems of the Americas creates a division between pre-and post-contact systems that show the extent of colonial powers. This paper also discusses the writing systems that are still in use and their community's development of revitalization tools and resources. The writing systems of the Americas are an integral part of history, showcasing the people who have lived there for many thousands of years. |
author2 |
Clayton, Ian Montoya, Ignacio Ferguson, Jenanne Fridland, Valerie |
format |
Thesis |
author |
Nolte, Jaycob |
author_facet |
Nolte, Jaycob |
author_sort |
Nolte, Jaycob |
title |
Writing of the Americas |
title_short |
Writing of the Americas |
title_full |
Writing of the Americas |
title_fullStr |
Writing of the Americas |
title_full_unstemmed |
Writing of the Americas |
title_sort |
writing of the americas |
publishDate |
2021 |
url |
http://hdl.handle.net/11714/7818 |
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inuktitut |
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inuktitut |
op_relation |
http://hdl.handle.net/11714/7818 |
_version_ |
1774719366442516480 |