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Letters beautiful and harmfulprint: print, education, and the issue of script in colonial North India829-853

    1. [1] University of Chicago

      University of Chicago

      City of Chicago, Estados Unidos

  • Localización: Paedagogica Historica: International journal of the history of education, ISSN 0030-9230, Vol. 55, Nº. 6, 2019 (Ejemplar dedicado a: Education and the visual dimension of writing : script systems and typefaces in educational history), págs. 829-853
  • Idioma: inglés
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  • Resumen
    • The question of script was paramount in the nineteenth-century debate over Hindi and Urdu, two closely related languages that are characterised by “extreme digraphia”. Rather than rehearsing the well-known story of the culturally and politically charged process of differentiation in which the two sister languages became prime markers of religious identity, this paper explores the function and visual dimension of Devanagari and the Perso-Arabic script in the field of primary education. In investigating the impact of movable type printing and lithography in educational publishing, it asks how shifts in print technology and typographic innovation intersected with language ideology. The paper traces the variety of aesthetic, technological, and social arguments advanced by colonial officials, missionaries, and Indian educators in favour of either script, while also exploring how the movement for Romanisation and the prevalence of popular writing systems such as Kaithi challenged the use of the Nagari and Urdu scripts in primary education. Against the backdrop of the complex linguistic ecology of North India, it argues that the issue of script cannot be reduced to language ideological debates. Looking beyond language antagonism and engaging writing systems through the lens of functionality, standardising technologies, and typographic change will help elucidate how their social and cultural function was constituted in educational contexts


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