2019. Naturalness in scripts and writing systems: Outlining a Natural Grapholinguistics (original) (raw)
2019
Abstract
Naturalness Theory (NT) is based on the notion of linguistic naturalness and postulates that linguistic phenomena that are structured in ways to make them relatively easy to process by humans physiologically, cognitively, and sociopragmatically are more natural than other, more complex phenomena. Drawing on evidence such as language change, language acquisition, and language disorders, various parameters of naturalness have been proposed. These, thus far, focus primarily on the phonological and morphological subsystems of language. This dissertation is, on the one hand, an (1) extension of NT as it offers an outline of how the notion of naturalness can be transferred to grapholinguistic phenomena. To achieve this, typologically highly diverse scripts and writing systems must be compared to identify naturalness parameters at the universal, typological, and system-specific levels for both the material (graphetic) and linguistic (graphematic) subsystems of writing. Such a comparison requires a shared descriptive and terminological framework, which is why this dissertation provides, on the other hand, an (2) outline of a descriptive grapholinguistics complete with definitions of graphetic and graphematic categories, most notably the grapheme. Through merging the theoretical tenets of NT with a systematic analysis of writing, this dissertation demonstrates that a so-called Natural Grapholinguistics offers promising new insights as well as a tertium comparationis for future comparative analyses of scripts and writing systems. The end result is a first sketch of a theory of writing that, as a theory, does not stop at the description of the structure of writing systems, but is capable of explaining why they are built the way they are.
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