This working paper formally introduces and defines somatographemics, a new semiotic discipline distinct from standard graphemics. While traditional graphemics studies how written signs (graphemes) relate to phonological units (sounds) , somatographemics investigates the deliberate deformation of written signs to directly encode biological, physiological, or somatic states—such as crisis, atrophy, inflammation, hunger, metabolic disruption, trauma, and death. Coined and operationalized by Francis Brice Siewe Mingueu in 2026, the concept addresses a persistent gap between graphemic theory and somatic reality. The paper establishes the formal boundaries of the discipline, provides a comparative matrix against traditional linguistics , and outlines its relationship to adjacent fields like biosemiotics, trauma studies, and behavioral semiotics. Furthermore, the paper highlights the two founding applications of the discipline: The Biodiacritic System (BDS): Applied to public health communication to encode nutritional risk and trigger pre-cognitive behavioral avoidance. The Oblicist System: Applied to postcolonial archival theory, using a taxonomy of diacritical signs on colonial texts as a method of symbolic restitution ("surgery on the archive").
FRANCIS BRICE SIEWE MINGUEU (Mon,) studied this question.