Doukipudonktan: The History of French Writing by Gabriella Parussa
In her study "Écrire le français" (2025), historical linguist Gabriella Parussa traces the history of French writing as a complex social and cultural process. The book shows how spoken French found its way into writing over the centuries, which political, institutional, and technical decisions shaped orthography, and why the Latin alphabet was adopted despite its shortcomings. Parussa combines detailed historical knowledge with a critical diagnosis of the present, making it clear that the French writing system is historically contingent, socially contested, and functionally multifaceted—from its initial codification in the 9th century to today's digital writing practices. This review demonstrates how Parussa not only situates the emergence of the standard but also its literary and playful uses within a historical context. Using case studies such as Jacques Peletier du Mans and Raymond Queneau, the review shows that reform and aesthetic reflection offer two complementary perspectives on the same phenomenon: French orthography as a cultural reservoir and a social instrument. The review also highlights the book's relevance to literary history, poetics and sociology of literature, and makes clear how Parussa's work reveals writing itself as a historically developed, reflexive practice.
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