Roger Caillois: The Writing of Stones (1970/1985)
Filed under book | Tags: · calligraphy, geology, mineralogy, writing
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“The Writing of Stones is a fascinating meditation on the human imagination contemplating the interior of stones. Caillois examines patterns that are revealed by polishing sections of minerals such as agate, jasper, and onyx. He considers the impact these configurations have had upon the human imagination throughout history and he reviews man’s attempt to categorize and explain them.
Marguerite Yourcenar [in her introduction] points out that ‘there had taken place in [his] intellect the equivalent of the Copernican revolution: man was no longer the center of the universe, except in the sense that the center is everywhere; man, like all the rest, was a cog in the whole system of turning wheels. Quite early on, having entered ‘the forbidden laboratories,’ Caillois applied himself to the study of diagonals which link the species, of the recurrent phenomena that act, so to speak as a matrix of forms.’ Caillois found the presence throughout the universe of a sensibility and a consciousness analogous to our own. One way which this consciousness expresses itself is in a “natural fantasy” that is evident in the pictures found in stones. Man’s own aesthetic may then be no more than one of many manifestations of an all-pervasive aesthetic that reveals itself in the natural world.”
First published as L’ecriture des pierres, Editions d’Art Albert Skira, Genève, 1970
Translated by Barbara Bray
With an Introduction by Marguerite Yourcenar
Publisher University Press of Virginia, Charlotesville, 1985
ISBN 0813910501, 9780813910505
108 pages
via pink panter
Commentaries: Marina Warner (Cabinet), 50 Watts.
Interview with author (video, 26 min, 1974, ina.fr, in French, via Véfa Lucas)
PDF (5 MB, updated on 2020-11-19)
Comments (5)Johannes Friedrich: Extinct Languages (1954/1957)
Filed under book | Tags: · antiquity, cuneiform, language, writing

This is the story of the art of deciphering forgotten languages and scripts. In this engaging and readable book author Friedrich, one of the foremost experts in both linguistics and archaeology, first describes the languages and scripts of the Ancient Orient, then proceeds on an intellectual journey that will take the reader through Egyptian Hieroglyphics, the cuneiform writing of Mesopotamia, the interpretation of Sumerian records, the scripts of the hittites and finally the languages of Ancient Italy.
First published as Entzifferung Verschollener Schriften und Sprachen, Springer, 1954
Translated by Frank Gaynor
Publisher Philosophical Library, New York, 1957
182 pages
via Archive.org
Review (Herbert H. Paper, Language, 1955)
PDF (no OCR)
Comment (0)Friedrich Kittler: Draculas Vermächtnis: Technische Schriften (1993) [German]
Filed under book | Tags: · film, literary theory, media theory, philosophy, radio, writing

A collection of essays by Friedrich Kittler, including his famous reading of Dracula.
Essays zu den „Effekten der Sprengung des Schriftmonopols“, zu den Analogmedien Schallplatte, Film und Radio sowie „technische Schriften, die numerisch oder algebraisch verfasst sind“.
Publisher Reclam, Leipzig, 1993
ISBN 3379014761, 9783379014762
259 pages
via poshumano
Review (Geert Lovink, Mediamatic)
PDF
See also Kittler at Monoskop wiki