Among several writing systems devised by native speakers of Hmong, the Sayaboury script is of interest because it is the only one in which a body of apparently original mythic religio-political text material has been recorded. It also has an unusually ingenious, elegant, and economical set of vowel symbols, and a convention of doubling all initial consonant symbols in formal writing. Of secondary interest is the fact that this system was produced (and revealed to one of the authors) west of the Mekong River — not in the more focal Hmong areas which funneled refugees through Ban Vinai, Thailand, into the United States. The authors present here their limited joint knowledge about these texts and the system with which they are written, describing how they became known, their messianic nature, the structure of the writing system, its possible origins, and the fit between the writing and the Hmong language.
2020. The Art of Not Being Scripted So Much. Current Anthropology 61:2 ► pp. 240 ff.
Kelly, Piers
2016. Introducing the Eskaya Writing System: A Complex Messianic Script from the Southern Philippines. Australian Journal of Linguistics 36:1 ► pp. 131 ff.
2018. L’art de ne pas être lisible. Terrain :70 ► pp. 38 ff.
Sidwell, Paul
2008. The Khom script of the Kommodam Rebellion. International Journal of the Sociology of Language 2008:192
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