This study explores the evidence for Chinese writing in the late
Neolithic (3500-2000 BCE) and early Bronze Age (2000-1250 BCE) periods.
Chinese writing is often said to have begun with little incubation
during the late Shang period (c. 1300-1045 BCE) in the middle-lower
Yellow River Valley area as a sudden independent invention. This
explanation runs counter to evidence from Mesopotamia, Egypt, and
Mesoamerica that shows that independent developments of writing
generally undergo a protracted evolution. It also ignores archaeological
data from the Chinese Neolithic and early Bronze Age that reveals the
existence of signs comparable to Shang characters.
Paola Demattè
takes this data into account to address the issue of what writing is,
and when, why, and how it develops, by employing a theory of writing
that does not privilege language as a prime mover. It focuses instead on
visual systems of communication as well as ideological and
socio-economic developments as key elements that promote the eventual
development of writing. To understand the processes that led to primary
developments of writing, The Origins of Chinese Writing
draws from the latest research on the early writing systems of
Mesopotamia, Egypt, and Mesoamerica, and other forms of protowriting.
The result is a novel and inclusive theoretical approach to the
archaeological evidence, grammatological data, and textual sources, an
approach that demonstrates that Chinese writing emerged out of a long
process that began in the Late Neolithic and continued during the Early
Bronze Age.
Oxford University Press
2022