Charts the evolutionary origins of language, the social and cultural factors that govern its use, change, and development, as well as what it reveals about the human mind. In most communication, nonverbal cues are our emotional expression, signal our...
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Charts the evolutionary origins of language, the social and cultural factors that govern its use, change, and development, as well as what it reveals about the human mind. In most communication, nonverbal cues are our emotional expression, signal our personality, and are our attitude toward our addressee. They provide the essential means of nuance and are essential to getting our ideas across. But in digital communication, these cues are missing, which can lead to miscommunication. The explosion of Emoji, in less than four years, has arisen precisely because it fulfills exactly these functions which are essential for communication but are otherwise absent in texts and emails. Evans persuasively argues that emojis add tone and an emotional voice and nuance, making us more effective communicators in the digital age
256 Seiten, 8 ungezählte Seiten Tafeln,
Illustrationen,
21 cm
Notes:
Emojis used for the letters 'o' in title on title page and spine
Originally published in Great Britain by Michael O'Mara Books Limited
Is Emoji the new universal 'language' -- Emoji crime and the nature of communication -- What's in a word? -- Emotionally speaking -- Colourful writing -- A picture paints a thousand words -- All change for a changing world -- Epilogue: The future of communication