

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 and author of Sinography, delves into the fascinating history of Chinese characters in East Asia. He discusses how Chinese script influenced the written languages of Japan, Korea, and Vietnam, serving as a unifying medium despite linguistic differences. Handel explains the intricate evolution of these characters, their cultural significance, and their adaptability in modern technology, reflecting on how they continue to shape communication today.
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Characters Encode Meaningful Units
- Chinese characters represent meaningful units (words or morphemes) rather than individual sounds like alphabet letters.
- You cannot read individual consonants or vowels from a character, only the syllabic meaningful unit it encodes.
Sound And Meaning Parts Inside Characters
- Most characters are compound graphs with parts indicating sound and parts indicating meaning.
- Those components were once highly functional but are often opaque today due to language change.
From Oracle Bones To Standardized Script
- The oracle bones show a fully developed writing system by ~1250 BCE, but earlier precursors likely existed on perishable materials.
- Like other early scripts, Chinese characters evolved from pictures into phonetic and abbreviated forms and then standardized.