It was published by University Presses of America in 1997 (with a
spurious copyright date of 1994), but it's an anthropology dissertation
and gives virtually no information about the script itself. The review
in *Written Language and Literacy* by Wm. S.-Y. Wang squeezes what can
be gleaned about the script out of the book.

Doug_Ewell@... wrote:
>
> OK, I'll see if I can help a bit.
>
> The book Michael refers to is:
>
> Chiang, William Wei. "We Two Know the Script: We Have Become Good Friends."
> Linguistic and Social Aspects of the Women's Script Literacy in Southern Hunan
> China. Diss. Yale U. Ann Arbor. UMI, 1992 9221412
>
> I got this reference from:
>
> http://www2.ttcn.ne.jp/~orie/reference.htm
>
> It does appear that many of the search hits are references to books.
> I suspect that Marcus would rather do his research on-screen.
>
> A decent starting point seems to be "World of Nushu" at:
>
> http://www2.ttcn.ne.jp/~orie/
>
> When looking for web sites on Nushu (or Nüshu), be sure to search for "Nu Shu"
> (two words) as well.
>
> -Doug Ewell
> posting from work in Irvine, California
>
> ____________________Reply Separator____________________
> Subject: Re: Nüshu
> Author: <qalam@yahoogroups.com>
> Date: 2002-02-14 10:40 PM
>
> At 13:05 -0800 2002-02-14, <Doug_Ewell@...> wrote:
> >"marcuslindqvist" <kml_private@...> wrote:
> >
> >> Does anyone know of any good sites about Nüshu? I'm very interested
> >> in Nüshu, and many other chinese minority scripts, like the Yi
> >> syllabary and the Naxi/Geba/Dongba script.
--
Peter T. Daniels grammatim@...