Nüshu (女书): Linguistic, Socio-cultural, and Musical Characterization of a Unique Women's Script
Giulia Falcini *
Universidad de Sevilla, Spain.
*Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Abstract
This article investigates Nushu: Linguistic, socio-cultural, and musical characterization of a unique women’s script. The world's only writing system historically created and used exclusively by women. Originating in Jiangyong County, China, it is a significant cultural, linguistic, and anthropological phenomenon.
Based on literature review and recent fieldwork—including oral testimonies, corpus creation, and musical analysis—this study pursues three objectives. First, it outlines the historical and social context enabling its emergence in a patriarchal society. Second, it analyzes its structural characteristics as a phonetic syllabary (distinct from logographic hanzi) and its linguistic features (phonology, lexicon, syntax). Third, it explores Nüshu's essential performative and musical dimension, linking its existence to singing and oral transmission.
Finally, the article discusses Nüshu’s status as an Intangible Cultural Heritage, analyzing the challenges of heritage designation, commercialization, and revitalization. The study finds that Nüshu’s transmission today depends on the preservation of its performative and collective contexts, rather than on museum display or institutional promotion alone. It argues that Nüshu is inseparable from its vocal and communal dimension, affirming its value as a tool for resilience and sisterhood. The article concludes by recommending that revitalization efforts prioritize community-based teaching and performance practices. It also positions Nüshu within a comparative framework of female-created writing systems (e.g., Japanese Hiragana, African Sande symbolism) to illustrate broader patterns of gendered creativity and linguistic resistance.
Keywords: Nüshu, women's script, Gynography, Chinese linguistics, gender studies, intangible cultural heritage, ethnomusicology, Jiangyong