100 Symbols That Changed the World

100 Symbols That Changed the World

by Colin Salter
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 13/10/2022

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100 Symbols That Changed The World looks at the genesis and adoption of the world’s most recognizable symbols.


Universal symbols have been used as a form of communication from the Bronze Age, when the dynasties of ancient Egypt began the evolution of the thousand characters used in Egyptian hieroglyphics. In pre-Columbian America the Mayan civilization set out on a similar course, using pictures as a narrative text.


With the adoption of written languages, symbols have come to represent an illustrated shorthand. The dollar sign in America evolved from colonists’ trade with the Spanish, and the widespread acceptance of Spanish currency in deals. Merchants’ clerks would shorten the repeated entry of “pesos” in their accounts ledgers, which needed to be written with a ‘p’ and an ‘s’. A single letter ‘s’ with the vertical stroke of the ‘p’ was much quicker. Historically correct dollar signs have a single stroke through the ‘S’.


Symbols are also used to impart quick, recognizable safety advice. The radio activity symbol was designed in Berkley in 1946 to warn of the dangers of radioactive substances – and following the widespread use of gas masks in WWII, the trefoil symbol echoed the shape of the mask.


There are many symbols of affiliation, not only to religious groups, but support of political causes or even brand loyalty. Symbols are used for identification, military markings and recognition of compatibility. They allow users to convey a large amount of information in a short space, such as the iconography of maps or an electrical circuit diagram. Symbols are an essential part of the architecture of mathematics.


And in the case of the 1964 Tokyo Olympics – the first Games to be held in an Asian country – symbols allowed the organizers to create event signage that wouldn’t be lost in translation. The set of Olympic sports pictograms for the Games was a novel solution, and one that was added to in Mexico and Munich.


Organized chronologically, 100 Symbols That Changed The World looks at the genesis and adoption of the world’s most recognizable symbols.

ISBN:
9781911682950
9781911682950
Category:
Popular culture
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
13-10-2022
Language:
English
Publisher:
HarperCollins Publishers
Colin Salter

Colin Salter has written several books on engineering and science, including Men On The Moon: A History Of Space Exploration (Instinctive 2013) and Everything You Need To Know About Inventions (Portico, 2012).

In putting togeher his first history of the Jaguar marque he will be assisted by Paul Walton, editor of Jaguar World magazine.

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