Tuesday, June 9, 2009

Massachusetts is red(-faced)

    Dr. Victor Mair, who wrote about the MaxPlanckForschung Cover Fiasco, points me to another piece in Language Log.

    MairMass0b

    Dr. Mair says:

    Reading the New Yorker on the train this morning, I was struck by the full-page ad following p. 17. When my eye drifted down the page a little, I had a bit of a shock.

    I could immediately read the four Chinese characters on the arch over the entrance to Boston's Chinatown: ("All-under-Heaven Is a Commonwealth"), reading left to right. What left me disoriented is that each of the characters in the inscription was reversed. But then I realized that the entire inscription was a mirror image of what it should be. In other words, all four characters should be flipped over as a group and read from right to left.

    MairMass1a
    As shown in the ad

    MairMass1b
    Corrected (Note: classical Chinese is written right-to-left, hence the corrected image shows 公為下天 instead of 天下為公)

    While not as embarrassing as the MaxPlanckForschung Cover Fiasco, I think that the Massachusetts Office of Travel and Tourism might consider asking the advertising agency responsible for the New Yorker slip-up to give them a partial refund.

    Update: This snafu is brought to you by Connelly Partners in Boston, MA. http://www.connellypartners.com/

    Go to "our work", print, MOTT, it's the third one.

    (Thanks to anonymous for the tip.)

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