Penmanship
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Penmanship is the technique of writing
with the hand using a writing instrument. The various generic and formal historical styles of
writing are called hands, whilst an individual personal style of penmanship is
referred to as handwriting.
History
Origins
The earliest example of writing is
the Sumerian pictographic system found on clay tablets, which eventually
developed around 3200 BC into a modified version called cuneiform.[1]
Cuneiform is from the Latin meaning “wedge shaped” and was impressed on wet
clay with a sharpened reed.[2]
This form of writing eventually evolved into ideographic system (where a sign
represents an idea) and then to a syllabic system, (where a sign represents a
syllable).[3]
Developing around the same time, the Egyptian system of hieroglyphics
also began as a pictographic script and evolved into a system of syllabic
writing. Two cursive scripts were eventually created, hieratic shortly after
hieroglyphs were invented and demotic in the seventh century BC.[4]
Scribes wrote these scripts usually on papyrus
with ink on a reed pen.
The first known alphabetical system
came from the Phoenicians, who developed a vowel-less system of 22 letters around the
eleventh century BC.[5]
The Greeks eventually adapted the Phoenician alphabet around the eighth century
BC. Adding vowels to the alphabet and dropping some consonants, the Greeks developed a script which included
only what we know of as capital Greek letters.[6]
The lower case letters of Classical Greek were a later invention of the Middle
Ages. The Phoenician alphabet also influenced the Hebrew and Aramaic
scripts, which follow a vowel-less system. One Hebrew script was only used for
religious literature and by a small community of Samaritans up until the sixth
century BC. Aramaic was the official script of the Babylonian, Assyrian and
Persian empires and ‘Square Hebrew’ (the script now used in Israel) developed
from Aramaic around the third century AD.[7]
Handwriting
based on Latin script
The Romans in Southern Italy
eventually adopted the Greek alphabet as modified by the Etruscans
to develop Latin writing.[8]
Like the Greeks, the Romans employed stone, metal, clay, and papyrus as writing
surfaces. Handwriting styles which were used to produce manuscripts included
square capitals, rustic capitals, uncials, and half-uncials.[9]
Square capitals were employed for more formal texts based on stone
inscriptional letters while rustic capitals freer, compressed, and efficient.[8]
Uncials were rounded capitals (majuscules) that originally were developed by
the Greeks in the third century BC, but became popular in Latin manuscripts by
the fourth century AD. Roman cursive or informal handwriting started out as a
derivative of the capital letters, though the tendency to write quickly and
efficiently made the letters less precise.[10]
Half-uncials (minuscules) were lower case letters, which eventually became the
national hand of Ireland.[9]
Other combinations of half-uncial and cursive handwriting developed throughout
Europe, including Visigothic, and Merovingian.[11]
At the end of the eighth century, Charlemagne
decreed that all writings in his empire were to be written in a standard
handwriting, which came to be known as Carolingian minuscule.[12]
Alcuin of York was commissioned by Charlemagne to create this new handwriting,
which he did in collaboration with other scribes and based on the tradition of
other Roman handwriting.[13]
Carolingian minuscule was used to produce many of the manuscripts from
monasteries until the eleventh century and most lower-case letters of today's
European scripts derive from it.[14]
Gothic or black-letter script,
evolved from Carolingian, became the dominant handwriting from the twelfth
century until the Italian Renaissance (1400–1600 AD). This script was not as
clear as the Carolingian, but instead was narrower, darker, and denser. Because
of this, the dot above the i was added in order to differentiate it from
the similar pen strokes of the n, m, and u. Also, the
letter u was created as separate from the v, which had previously
been used for both sounds.[15]
Part of the reason for such compact handwriting was to save space, since
parchment was expensive.[16]
Gothic script, being the writing style of scribes in Germany when Gutenberg invented movable type, became the model for the first type
face. Another variation of Carolingian minuscule was created by the Italian
humanists in the fifteenth century, called by them littera antiqua and
now called humanist minuscule.[17]
This was a combination of Roman capitals and the rounded version of Carolingian
minuscule. A cursive form eventually developed and it became increasingly
slanted due to the quickness with which it could be written. This manuscript
handwriting, called cursive humanistic, became known as the typeface Italic
used throughout Europe.[18]
Copperplate engraving influenced handwriting as it allowed penmanship copybooks
to be more widely printed. Copybooks first appeared in Italy around the
sixteenth century; the earliest writing manuals were published by Sigismondo Fanti
and Ludovico degli Arrighi.[19]
Other manuals were produced by Dutch and French writing masters later in the
century, including Pierre Hamon.[19]
However, copybooks only became commonplace in England with the invention of
copperplate engraving. Engraving could better produce the flourishes in
handwritten script, which helped penmanship masters to produce beautiful
examples for students.[15]
Some of these early penmanship manuals included those of Edward Cocker, John Seddon,
and John Ayer. By the eighteenth century, schools were established to teach
penmanship techniques from master penmen, especially in England and the United
States.[16]
Penmanship became part of the curriculum in American schools by the early
1900s, rather than just reserved for specialty schools teaching adults
penmanship as a professional skill. Several different penmanship methods have
been developed and published, including Spencerian, Getty-Dubay, Barchowsky
Fluent Handwriting, Icelandic (Italic), Zaner-Bloser, and D’Nealian methods
among others used in American education.[16]
Handwriting
based on Chinese script
Writing systems developed in East
Asia include Chinese and Japanese writing systems. Chinese characters represent whole
morphemes rather than individual sounds, and consequently are visually far more
complex than European scripts; in some cases their pictographic origins are
still visible. The earliest form of Chinese was written on bones and shells
(called Jiaguwen)
in the fourteenth century BC. Other writing surfaces used during this time
included bronze, stone, jade, pottery, and clay, which became more popular
after the twelfth century BC.[20]
Greater Seal script (Dazhuan) flourished during
1100 BC and 700 BC and appeared mainly in bronze vessels.[21]
Lesser Seal script (Xiaozhuan) is the precursor
of modern complex Chinese script, which is more stylized than the Greater Seal.[21]
Chinese handwriting is considered an
art, more so than illuminated manuscripts in Western culture. Calligraphy
is widely practiced in China, which employs scripts such as Kaishu (standard), Xingshu
(semi-cursive), and Caoshu (cursive).[22]
Chinese calligraphy is meant to be represent the artistic personality in a way
western calligraphy cannot, and therefore penmanship is valued higher than in
any other nation.[23]
Standard Script (Kaishu) is main traditional script used today.
Japanese writing evolved from
Chinese script and Chinese characters, called kanji, or ideograms, were adopted to
represent Japanese words and grammar.[24]
Kanji were simplified to create two other scripts, called hiragana
and katakana.
Hiragana is the more widely used script in Japan today, while katakana, meant
for formal documents originally, is used similarly to italics in alphabetic
scripts.[25]
Teaching
methods and history
Books
used in North America
Platt Rogers Spencer
is known as the "Father of American Penmanship". His writing system
was first published in 1848, in his book Spencer and Rice's System of
Business and Ladies' Penmanship. The most popular Spencerian manual was The
Spencerian Key to Practical Penmanship, published by his sons in 1866. This
"Spencerian Method"
Ornamental Style was taught in American schools until the mid-1920s, and has
seen a resurgence in recent years through charter schools
and home schooling using revised Spencerian books and methods produced by former
IAMPETH
president Michael Sull (* 1946).
George A. Gaskell (1845–1886), a
student of Spencer, authored two popular books on penmanship, Gaskell's
Complete Compendium of Elegant Writing and The Penman's Hand-Book
(1883). Louis Henry Hausam published the "New Education in Penmanship" in
1908, called "the greatest work of the kind ever published."[26]
Many copybooks were produced in
North America at the start of the 20th century, mostly for Business Style
penmanship (a simplified form of Ornamental Style). These included those
produced by A. N. Palmer, a student of Gaskell, who developed the Palmer Method,
as reflected in his Palmer's Guide to Business Writing, published in
1894. Also popular was Zaner-Bloser Script, introduced by Charles Paxton Zaner (15 February 1864 – 1 December 1918) and Elmer Ward
Bloser (6 November 1865 – 1929) of the Zanerian Business College. The A. N. Palmer Company folded in the early 1980s.
Modern Styles include more than 200
published textbook curricula including: D'Nealian Script (a derivative of the Palmer Method which uses a slanted,
serifed manuscript form followed by an entirely joined and looped cursive),
Modern Zaner-Bloser which accounts for the majority of handwriting textbook
sales in the USA, A Beka, Schaffer, Peterson, Loops and Groups, McDougal, Steck
Vaughn, and many others.
Italic Styles include Getty-Dubay
(slightly slanted), Eager, Portland, Barchowsky, Queensland, etc.
Other copybook styles that are
unique and do not fall in to any previous categories are Smithhand, Handwriting
without Tears, Ausgangsschrift, Bob Jones, etc. these may differ greatly from
each other in a variety of ways.
Schools
in East Asia
By the nineteenth century, attention
was increasingly given to developing quality penmanship in Eastern schools.
Countries which had a writing system based on logographs and syllabaries placed
particular emphasis on form and quality when learning.[27]
These countries, such as China and Japan, have pictophonetic characters which
are difficult to learn. Chinese children start by learning the most fundamental
characters first and building to the more esoteric ones. Often, children trace
the different strokes in the air along with the teacher and eventually start to
write them on paper.[27]
In the twentieth and twenty-first
centuries, there have been more efforts to simplify these systems and
standardize handwriting. For example, in China in 1955, in order to respond to
illiteracy among people, the government introduced a Romanized version of
Chinese script, called Pinyin.[28]
However, by the 1960s, people rebelled against the infringement upon
traditional Chinese by foreign influences.[28]
This writing reform did not help illiteracy among peasants. (However, it does
help speakers of phonetic languages learn Chinese.) Japanese also has
simplified the Chinese characters it uses into scripts called kana. However
kanji are still used in preference over kana in many contexts, and a large part
of children's schooling is learning kanji.[29]
Moreover, Japan has tried to hold on to handwriting as an art form while not
compromising the more modern emphasis on speed and efficiency. In the early
1940s, handwriting was taught twice, once as calligraphy in the art section of
school curricula, and then again as a functional skill in the language section.[30]
The practical function of penmanship in Japan did not start to be questioned
until the end of the twentieth century; while typewriters proved more efficient
than penmanship in the modern West, these technologies had a hard time
transferring to Japan, since the thousands of characters involved in the
language made typing unfeasible.[30]
Motor
control
Handwriting requires the motor coordination of multiple joints in the hand, wrist, elbow, and shoulder
to form letters and to arrange them on the page. Holding the pen and guiding it
across paper depends mostly upon sensory information from skin, joints and
muscles of the hand and this adjusts movement to changes in the friction
between pen and paper.[31]
With practice and familiarity, handwriting becomes highly automated using motor
programs stored in motor memory.[32]
Compared to other complex motor skills handwriting is far less dependent on a
moment-to-moment visual guidance.[33][34]
Research in individuals with
complete peripheral
deafferentation with and without vision of their
writing hand finds increase of number of pen touches, increase in number of
inversions in velocity, decrease of mean stroke frequency and longer writing
movement duration. The changes show that cutaneous
and proprioceptive feedback play a critical role in updating the motor
memories and internal models that
underlie handwriting. In contrast, sight provides only a secondary role in
adjusting motor commands.[34]
The entire wiki article can be found at: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Penmanship
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