Signs of Civilisation: How Punctuation Changed History

Michalsen, Bard Borch

£8.99

With the invention of printing, reading books moved from being an act only performed by priests and aristocrats into an individual, even private, activity. This change helped spark the Renaissance, the Reformation, the Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution – in which punctuation played a crucial role. As long as texts were read out loud only by an educated elite there was no need for punctuation to mark pauses, full stops or questions. So punctuation – the full stop, the comma, the exclamation mark, the question mark and the semicolon – helped shape modern day Europe as we know it.

Publish Date: 03/09/2020

Description

‘Punctuation is not only an important part of our language code; an advanced system of punctuation has been a driving force in our entire Western Civilisation. Nothing less.’

With the invention of printing, reading books moved from being an act only performed by priests and aristocrats into an individual, even private, activity. This change helped spark the Renaissance, the Reformation, the Enlightenment and the Industrial Revolution – in which punctuation played a crucial role. As long as texts were read out loud only by an educated elite there was no need for punctuation to mark pauses, full stops or questions.

So punctuation – the full stop, the comma, the exclamation mark, the question mark and the semicolon – helped shape modern-day Europe as we know it.

Additional information

Weight 127 g
Dimensions 196 × 126 × 14 mm
Author

Publisher

Imprint

Cover

Paperback

Pages

160

Language

English

Edition
Dewey

411.09 (edition:23)

Readership

General – Trade / Code: K