Happy New Year! Get 10% off all books on our website throughout January! Discount will be applied automatically at checkout.

Inventing Writing

Prophets, Shamans, and the Transmission of Ritual Discourse in North American Indigenous Cultures, 1600–1900

Pierre Deleage author Matthew H Evans translator Victoria Bergstrom translator

Format:Paperback

Publisher:HAU Society Of Ethnographic Theory

Published:31st Dec '25

£18.00 was £20.00

Supplier delay - available to order, but may take longer than usual.

Inventing Writing cover

Why is it that, throughout their history, humans have repeatedly taken on the task of developing writing systems? Inventing Writing offers an array of conceptual tools for answering this question. In it, Pierre Déléage explores a series of cases involving the invention and use of writing systems by indigenous North American societies. Between the seventeenth and nineteenth centuries, a number of prophetic and shamanic movements developed original inscription techniques to ensure the transmission of ceremonial discourses. Examining these sources, the author formulates an innovative hypothesis: All of these invented writing systems can be defined as intended to transcribe specific ritual discourses within the institutional frameworks that governed their transmission and recitation. By focusing on the pragmatic functions of these North American scripts in their ritual contexts, Déléage allows us to rethink the problem of the invention of writing beyond the confines of evolutionary approaches that have classically focused on the great phonographic scripts of human history (Mesopotamian, Egyptian, Chinese, and Maya) and have never been able deal with selective writing systems on their own terms. Déléage’s approach offers a novel and promising argument for uncoupling the origin of writing from the genesis of the state, an association that many specialists in the field have long made.

ISBN: 9781912808298

Dimensions: 9mm x 6mm x 15mm

Weight: 666g

150 pages