

Zev Handel, "Chinese Characters Across Asia: How the Chinese Script Came to Write Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese" (U Washington Press, 2025)
Jul 3, 2025
Zev Handel, a professor of Chinese linguistics at the University of Washington, dives into the fascinating history of Chinese characters and their influence on Japanese, Korean, and Vietnamese writing. He explains how these characters evolved from pictorial symbols to complex forms, connecting diverse cultures for over 2,500 years. Handel also discusses the unique adaptations of Chinese script in each language, the persistence of these characters amidst modern alternatives, and the future of text input technologies. This insightful conversation reveals the intricate relationship between language and culture in East Asia.
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Chinese Characters Structure
- Chinese characters represent meaningful units or words, not individual sounds like alphabets do.
- Most characters combine a sound part and a meaning part to convey words.
History of Chinese Writing
- Chinese writing began at least by 1250 BCE with oracle bones showing a full script.
- Over time, characters became more stylized and standardized via a literate elite.
Role of Classical Chinese
- Classical Chinese was a prestigious written form with distinct grammar and vocabulary from spoken dialects.
- It functioned like Latin in medieval Europe as a unifying written language across dialects.