Genesis, visual attributes and contemporary communication features of the alphabet Cover Image

Genesis, visual attributes and contemporary communication features of the alphabet
Genesis, visual attributes and contemporary communication features of the alphabet

Author(s): Filip Cvitić, Mirna Leko Šimić, Jasna Horvat
Subject(s): Communication studies, Sociology, Marketing / Advertising
Published by: Sveučilište Josipa Jurja Strossmayera u Osijeku, Ekonomski fakultet u Osijeku
Keywords: alphabet; genesis of script; visual designation; marketing communication; brand;

Summary/Abstract: Throughout 5,000 years of human literacy, the alphabet system has developed from pictograms and ideograms to the contemporary system of Latin letters. The simplification of primary pictograms and their transformation to ideograms followed the major goal of written communication – to transmit thoughts and ideas. Besides, written communication has enabled preservation of knowledge, and that has generated the expansion of information and its availability today. The high speed of gathering written information, as well as its superabundance, calls for rethinking of semiotic features of Latin letters as the basic units of written communication in the Western world, especially in terms of marketing communication and its effectiveness. The written expression is the major tool of branding and getting closer to target market segments. Social development influences the development of communication, which is visible through numerous brands and signs, i.e. symbols that make products and companies recognizable in the market. The distinct sign forms of the alphabet are used to suggest the story of a brand, product or service. A constituent element of its comprehension is conscious or unconscious knowledge drawn from different sources in the environment. The history of human literacy, the development of each particular letter, the communication rules of the contemporary marketplace, the impact of brands and information superabundance make up the basis for further research into communication features of the alphabet, semantics of written forms and their redefinition in the context of effective marketing communication.

  • Issue Year: 27/2014
  • Issue No: 1
  • Page Range: 41-56
  • Page Count: 16
  • Language: English