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Story of Emoji


  • Prestel
  • by Gavin Lucas
This is the first book to explain the genesis and cultural significance of emoji, the world's cutest and most popular form of shorthand. If you have a Twitter account or regularly send text messages, it's highly likely that you've used or received emoji. These characters include symbols and pictograms that represent a host of everyday objects and activities plus, crucially, a selection of faces that denote a range of emotions from happy to sad, angry, confused, surprised or tired.

ISBN 9783791381503 | E | HB
€23,50
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Publisher Prestel
ISBN 9783791381503
Author(s) Gavin Lucas
Publication date March 2016
Edition Hardback
Dimensions 195 x 195 mm
Illustrations 400 col.ill.
Pages 192
Language(s) Eng. ed.
Description

This is the first book to explain the genesis and cultural significance of emoji, the world's cutest and most popular form of shorthand.

If you have a Twitter account or regularly send text messages, it's highly likely that you've used or received emoji. These characters include symbols and pictograms that represent a host of everyday objects and activities plus, crucially, a selection of faces that denote a range of emotions from happy to sad, angry, confused, surprised or tired. The word 'emoji' literally translates from Japanese as 'picture' (e) and 'character' (moji). The Story of Emoji traces emoji from their origin as a symbol typeface created specifically for on screen use by a Japanese mobile phone provider in the late 1990s to an international communication phenomenon. As well as a history of emoji and an interview with their creator, Shigetaka Kurita, the book includes an exploration of non-text typefaces, from the decorative fleurons of the early days of the printing press to the innumerable digital typefaces available today, to the use of emoticons, ASCII art and kaomoji in typed messages. It also looks at an array of artworks, fashion lines, special character sets, advertisements and projects that convey emoji's widespread impact on contemporary culture. Finally, the book concludes with a section for which a group of illustrators, artists and graphic designers have created original emoji characters they wish existed, including bacon, a vinyl record and even a 'stabbed-in-the-back' emoji.


GAVIN LUCAS is a journalist, author and blogger whose work has been published in multiple languages around the world. Formerly a senior writer at Creative Review, he has written books on guerrilla advertising, button badges, and BMX bikes. He lives in London.