Transmission
I often stare enviously at people with words on their jumpers and t-shirts. The strings of characters are so full of promise: a link to faraway places, a sense of belonging. They proclaim membership of exclusive clubs: we have been somewhere, the letters seem to say.
Reality, by way of contrast, is disappointing. Would I really want to proclaim myself an alumnus of Standford or Cambridge? Not really, even if I were one—it seems too much like bragging. Worse, I would open myself to be judged not as an individual but as a member of some strange entity over which I have little or no control.
So why do I still feel that lure, that tug of power? I think the answer is a simple one: words have power, power to induce and command, power to shape the world. Words have power because we give them power; having given it, they have power over us. The aesthetic seduction of pleasing letter-forms is part of the attraction to a designer and a writer, but the true power is in the words themselves, not in their presentation.
When I see a character from a different alphabet I wonder, what does it mean? I can appreciate Arabic or Katakana for the shapes alone, but that question is always lurking in my mind, trying to give the words the power of meaning.
Last updated 13th Jan 2009
2 responses
Now that is a good idea.
You really should have used this entry as an opening to a “buy your ionfish.co.uk t-shirts here!” plug.
~ ceejayoz #