Back in 2012 as I prepared
to take some photos for the premiere issue of the SQ, I thought, wouldn’t it be
great to have an old fountain pen in some of the shots for my editorial page?
Well, what I didn’t know was the difficulty I’d have in trying to purchase one.
I remembered how easy it was, back in the 70s, to have a selection of
relatively inexpensive options; and now, I had to visit three stores just to
see if they sold more than one.
We start writing, beginning
with printing the alphabet and then move on to cursive writing or script.
Amusingly, I remember in the U.S. being allowed to use pencil or pen for my
schoolwork; however using an ink pen was mandatory when I attended school in
Antigua, where we usually used fountain pens! And penmanship was a subject of study.
In Sitges, penmanship or “cuadrícula”
usually ends around the age of 4yrs, and cursivo
begins in the 5th year. Unfortunately, around the western world, it
seems this skill starts to really wane by the 11th year when using
the computer is required to complete schoolwork. This in itself is a big
change, but also, the expectation is ambitious due to the assumption that every
child has access to a computer, and can type, without having typewriting
lessons!
Handwriting is unique,
expressive and believed to be a trademark of personality. Interestingly, the first
book to describe how to analyze handwriting dates back all the way to 1611. And
handwriting, believe it or not, stimulates functions of language, by actually
using an alphabet or visual symbols
(characters) of the sounds used in communication. And unfortunately, it appears
the decline in physical writing by hand has a correlation to ones ability to
decipher handwriting.
Commercial typewriting in
the 1800s started to change things and made it easy to leave calligraphy as an
art of the past, and it can be said the universal usage of the telephone
(created in the late 1870s) also had an enormous impact on letter writing.
Today we consume volumes of
the written word via numerous web pages, eBooks, and posts on social media
platforms albeit reduced to texting or using sms (short message service),
emails and of course, tweeting…
There
is however, some good in these new shorter forms of expression using new technologies—remember the quick postings on Twitter and other social networks which
created momentum for social uprisings in Tunisia and Cairo? And the effective #Black
Twitter, a cultural identity on the social network focused on issues of
interest to the black community, particularly in the United States during this
tumultuous time. These postings are consumed, and actually bring about social
change.
The writing of letters by
hand, one of the most personal of human acts, sadly is dying. But I hope we
never lose the art of penmanship, a sometimes very beautiful expression of our
uniqueness. Remember how wonderful it was to receive personal correspondence
through the post?
Receiving emails somehow just doesn’t come close to feeling the
pages of a hand written letter from a loved one.
For more interesting information go to:
http://site.xavier.edu/polt/typewriters/tw-history.html