ENDANGERED ALPHABETS
Updated 43 days ago
In 2009, when I started work on the first series of carvings that became the Endangered Alphabets Project, times were dark for indigenous and minority cultures. The lightning spread of television and the Internet were driving a kind of cultural imperialism into every corner of the world. Everyone had a screen or wanted a screen, and the English language and the Latin alphabet (or one of the half-dozen other major writing systems) were on every screen and every keyboard. Every other culture was left with a bleak choice: learn the mainstream script or type a series of meaningless tofu squares...
As we enter 2019, the UN Year of Indigenous Languages, it's worth considering what we can do, or what we can help others do, to sustain those rights.