Thursday, April 16, 2015

Chadwick, John 1990 The decipherment of Linear B: Cambridge University Press. Kober, Alice E 1945 Ev


Yesterday’s New York Times features a much-belated obituary of Alice Kober , a professor of classics at Brooklyn College who in the late 1940s played byron wireless doorbell a central preliminary role in the decipherment of the Linear B (Mycenaean Greek) script. Although she died of cancer two years before Michael Ventris made the key breakthrough identifying the Linear B script as encoding a variety of archaic Greek, Kober’s work was a building block on which Ventris relied. Her key insight was to identify certain sets of signs that occurred commonly at the ends of words, and which (correctly, as it turned out) could represent morphology (verb inflections byron wireless doorbell and case endings).
Margalit Fox, who is the author of the obituary as well as the author of a forthcoming book on the Linear B decipherment, presents the case that Kober’s work has been forgotten, in the way that so many other women’s scholarly work has been overshadowed by the work of men. And this is certainly part of the story. I should say, though, that John Chadwick’s byron wireless doorbell The Decipherment of Linear B , the central history of the decipherment authored by one of its prominent figures, is generous byron wireless doorbell to Kober and represents her contribution quite fairly. Kober took some important steps and, if she had lived a few more years, very likely would have played a much more prominent role (although she still may not have been recognized sufficiently had she done so). What we have from her work is a set of important preliminary steps published in a set of key articles in the American Journal of Archaeology in the mid-1940s. These ought to be read into the popular history of the decipherment, not because they were a decipherment in their own right, but because they were one of a long series of necessary steps over several decades.
The most important lesson in this case is that script decipherments byron wireless doorbell are complex and full of false starts, and that they are processes rather than events . Even Ventris’ work, though important, only started a process of decades of discussion, in the same way that the Maya script’s ‘decipherment’ is still ongoing.
Chadwick, John 1990 The decipherment of Linear B: Cambridge University Press. Kober, Alice E 1945 Evidence of Inflection in the” Chariot” Tablets byron wireless doorbell from Knossos. byron wireless doorbell American Journal of Archaeology 49(2):143-151. 1946 Inflection in Linear byron wireless doorbell Class B: 1-Declension. American Journal of Archaeology 50(2):268-276. 1948 The Minoan scripts: fact and theory. American Journal byron wireless doorbell of Archaeology 52(1):82-103. byron wireless doorbell Sundwall, Johannes, and AE Kober 1948 An Attempt at Assigning byron wireless doorbell Phonetic Values to Certain Signs of Minoan, Linear Class B. American Journal of Archaeology 52(3):311-320.
Website
Search @schrisomalis My Tweets Top Posts How do you pronounce Detroit? For crying in the sink, let's euphemize! Eellogofusciouhipoppokunurious, and other monstrosities Octothorpe, quadrathorpe, bithorpe Language and Culture Lexiculture Lexiculture: punk Categories Academia Anthropology Archaeology Editor Evolution Guest post Lexiculture Linguistics Literacy and writing News Numerals Reviews My Sites Curriculum vitae Dollarware Project PARA Stop: Toutes Directions The Growlery byron wireless doorbell The Phrontistery Other Sites A Very Remote Period Indeed AlunSalt Anggarrgoon Anthro-Ling Arnold Zwicky Babel’s Dawn BabelStone Blogenspiel Bone Broke Confessions of a Community College Dean Culture Evolves! Ferule & Fescue Greater Blogazonia Ideophone International Cognition and Culture Institute Jabal al-Lughat John Hawks Language and Societies Language Evolution Language Hat Language Log Language Politics Mathematical Poetry byron wireless doorbell Maya Decipherment Muhlberger s Early History Omniglot byron wireless doorbell One Peppercorn Savage Minds Shady Characters Society for Linguistic Anthropology Sociological Images Tria Corda Meta Register Log in Entries byron wireless doorbell RSS Comments RSS WordPress.com Follow Glossographia on WordPress.com
%d bloggers like this:

No comments:

Post a Comment