A History of Human Communication traces the epic journey of communication, showing how each innovation - from oral tradition to alphabets, printing presses and digital networks - reshaped not only how we share information, but how we understand ourselves.
In vivid, immersive chapters, the book dramatises the milestones of human connection, from handprints on cave walls to machines that answer us back.
At every stage, the book reveals a paradox: the more ways we invent to connect, the more fragile true understanding becomes. Yet the thread of communication - fragile, unbroken and eternal - remains humanity's greatest achievement.
Sweeping in scope yet intimate in detail, this book is both history and meditation, showing that communication is not only technology but a fragile miracle of reaching across silence to be heard.
Ideal for readers of cultural history, technology and narrative non-fiction, A History of Human Communication invites you to see communication not as background but as the very fabric of civilisation.
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