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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Guy Puzey , Laura KostanskiPublisher: Channel View Publications Ltd Imprint: Multilingual Matters Volume: 163 Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.442kg ISBN: 9781783094905ISBN 10: 1783094907 Pages: 288 Publication Date: 02 February 2016 Audience: Professional and scholarly , Professional & Vocational Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print ![]() This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsContributors Acknowledgements Laura Kostanski and Guy Puzey: Trends in Onomastics: An Introduction Part 1: The Varied Identities of People and Places 1. Katarzyna Aleksiejuk: Internet Personal Naming Practices and Trends in Scholarly Approaches 2. Ian D. Clark: Visitor Experiences of Aboriginal Place Names in Colonial Victoria, Australia, 1834-1900 3. Michael Walsh: Introduced Personal Names for Australian Aborigines: Adaptations to an Exotic Anthroponymy 4. Ellen S. Bramwell: Personal Naming and Community Practices in the Western Isles of Scotland: Putting Names 'in the Gaelic Sense' 5. Peter Muhlhausler and Joshua Nash: Signs of/on Power, Power on/of Signs: Language-Based Tourism, Linguistic Landscapes, and Onomastics on Norfolk Island Part 2: Attitudes and Attachment 6. Laura Kostanski: The Controversy of Restoring Indigenous Names: Lessons Learnt and Strategies for Success 7. Terhi Ainiala: Attitudes towards Street Names in Helsinki 8. Maimu Berezkina: Linguistic Landscape and the Inhabitants' Attitudes towards Place Names in Multicultural Oslo 9. Maggie Scott: Attitudes to Scots: Insights from the Toponymicon 10. Erzsebet Gyorffy: Slang Toponyms in Hungary: A Survey of Attitudes among Language Users Part 3: Power, Resistance and Control 11. Guy Puzey: Renaming as Counter-Hegemony: The Cases of Noreg and Padania 12. Staffan Nystrom: Naming Parks, Foot-Paths and Small Bridges in a Multicultural Suburban Area 13. Justyna B. Walkowiak: Personal Names in Language Policy and Planning: Who Plans What Names for Whom and How? 14. Aud-Kirsti Pedersen: Is the Official Use of Names in Norway Determined by the Place-Names Act or Attitudes? 15. Kaisa Rautio Helander: The Power of Administration in the Official Recognition of Indigenous Place Names in the Nordic Countries IndexReviewsThis volume makes a key contribution to the rapidly-expanding field of critical onomastics, presenting new insights into the symbolic value of names in human society. Case studies from different parts of the world highlight the role of names as powerful symbols of identity, particularly in areas of language contact or conflict. The essays are both scholarly and accessible, and deserve to be widely read. Carole Hough, University of Glasgow, UK; Names and Naming: People, Places, Perceptions and Power is a great addition to the 'critical turn' in naming studies. Guy Puzey and Laura Kostanski have brought together an excellent group of scholars to produce a diverse range of empirically rich and critically aware case studies of the politics of naming. This is an important book for anyone who wants to learn about the latest developments in socially engaged and critical approaches to onomastics. Lawrence D. Berg, University of British Columbia, Canada; I have been working with place names for many years but the articles in this publication have continued my education of the role that names of all varieties play in helping us to find our place. This is not only in a spatial sense, but in cultural and personal aspects I had not previously considered. These papers allowed me to see this and I commend all for the work that has been undertaken in the investigation and preparation of the insights presented. William Watt, Chair, United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names This volume makes a key contribution to the rapidly-expanding field of critical onomastics, presenting new insights into the symbolic value of names in human society. Case studies from different parts of the world highlight the role of names as powerful symbols of identity, particularly in areas of language contact or conflict. The essays are both scholarly and accessible, and deserve to be widely read. Carole Hough, University of Glasgow, UK; Names and Naming: People, Places, Perceptions and Power is a great addition to the 'critical turn' in naming studies. Guy Puzey and Laura Kostanski have brought together an excellent group of scholars to produce a diverse range of empirically rich and critically aware case studies of the politics of naming. This is an important book for anyone who wants to learn about the latest developments in socially engaged and critical approaches to onomastics. Lawrence D. Berg, University of British Columbia, Canada This volume makes a key contribution to the rapidly-expanding field of critical onomastics, presenting new insights into the symbolic value of names in human society. Case studies from different parts of the world highlight the role of names as powerful symbols of identity, particularly in areas of language contact or conflict. The essays are both scholarly and accessible, and deserve to be widely read. Carole Hough, University of Glasgow, UK This volume makes a key contribution to the rapidly-expanding field of critical onomastics, presenting new insights into the symbolic value of names in human society. Case studies from different parts of the world highlight the role of names as powerful symbols of identity, particularly in areas of language contact or conflict. The essays are both scholarly and accessible, and deserve to be widely read. Carole Hough, University of Glasgow, UK Names and Naming: People, Places, Perceptions and Power is a great addition to the 'critical turn' in naming studies. Guy Puzey and Laura Kostanski have brought together an excellent group of scholars to produce a diverse range of empirically rich and critically aware case studies of the politics of naming. This is an important book for anyone who wants to learn about the latest developments in socially engaged and critical approaches to onomastics. Lawrence D. Berg, University of British Columbia, Canada I have been working with place names for many years but the articles in this publication have continued my education of the role that names of all varieties play in helping us to find our place. This is not only in a spatial sense, but in cultural and personal aspects I had not previously considered. These papers allowed me to see this and I commend all for the work that has been undertaken in the investigation and preparation of the insights presented. William Watt, Chair, United Nations Group of Experts on Geographical Names Author InformationGuy Puzey is Lecturer in Scandinavian Studies at the University of Edinburgh, UK. His research interests include language policy, linguistic landscapes and geosemiotics, critical sociolinguistics and toponomastics, particularly in the contexts of Scotland and the Nordic countries. Laura Kostanski is Director at Geonaming Solutions Pty Ltd & Address Exchange Pty Ltd, and is based in Australia. Her research interests include toponymy, human geography, geospatial systems, crowd sourcing, government policy and Indigenous cultural heritage. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |