By Annette Cole
Mastron, Communications Director for Southern
Writers Magazine
As Communications
Director for Southern Writers Magazine, I’ve got to admit that words fascinate
me. Not just the combination, but the tone and voice of whatever you are trying
to convey to a reader.
A summer show, Blood and Treasure recently aired on CBS, and the pilot was about the secret tomb of
Cleopatra and Mark Anthony before it spun into another direction. Very Indiana
Jones like. So, of course, I was hooked. The second show they had to break a
code of symbols tied to an ancient language. It occurred to me that throughout
time the written word via symbols has evolved into and come full circle to the
emojis and acronyms for words found in our written texts of today. Anybody
with me on this?
My curiosity led me to
google the topic. I ran across a free course from OpenLearn
on the subject. The
course description states, “A brief
history of communication: hieroglyphics to emojis, is an introduction to
the history of writing and the key role it plays in human communication.
Nowadays, it is difficult to think of language as existing without writing, but
in the long history of humankind’s ability to use language it is only
relatively recently that writing emerged. The course also looks as the vital
relationship between technology and writing, and how the development of new
technologies alter the way we communicate.” Doesn’t that sound interesting?
The course content includes these subjects, “1 Language and everyday technologies• 2 A brief history of
writing• 3 Communicating in symbols and pictures• 3.1 Textspeak and
language change• 3.2 Picture-based writing• 4 The birth of writing• 4.1
Broadening the reach of language• 4.2 Different types of meaning-making• 4.3
From alphabet to emojis• 5 The universality of body language• 6
Emojis as a supplement to written language. • 7 Designing emojis.”
According to the
website the “Learning outcomes-After studying this course, you should be
able to: • understand how different writing systems have developed over time •
understand how technology influences what we can do with language, and the form
that language takes.”
I was easily able to
download this course for free onto my Kindle to read at my leisure. I feel there may be a number of free courses of interest at this source helpful to writers
at all levels.
I’m hoping this course
will answer my question, Are Emojis
the 21st Century Version of Hieroglyphics?
Has anyone else tried
free courses from OpenLearn at The Open University?
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