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Naming me, naming you. Personal names, online signatures and cultural meaning

Hagström, Charlotte LU (2012) 4. p.81-93
Abstract
Every day we talk and speak and chat to people. We write and listen to each other, refer to each other, describe to each other what we and others have done and said. Doing this, we sometimes use our given names, sometimes we go by our nicknames, which often indicate or clarify who we are or are made up by ourselves to draw other people’s attention. Nicknames can be official or informal, known by many or only by a few, real monikers or made up pseudonyms or signatures. Where ever there are people there are names, since names are and have always been part of human life. Sociologist Richard D. Alford states that ethnographic research has not found a single society whose members do not have names (1988:1). Names are cultural universals,... (More)
Every day we talk and speak and chat to people. We write and listen to each other, refer to each other, describe to each other what we and others have done and said. Doing this, we sometimes use our given names, sometimes we go by our nicknames, which often indicate or clarify who we are or are made up by ourselves to draw other people’s attention. Nicknames can be official or informal, known by many or only by a few, real monikers or made up pseudonyms or signatures. Where ever there are people there are names, since names are and have always been part of human life. Sociologist Richard D. Alford states that ethnographic research has not found a single society whose members do not have names (1988:1). Names are cultural universals, something all humans have in common, no matter where or when they live.

This article focuses on personal names and naming from a cultural ethnographic perspective. It begins with reflections on the link between name and self, continues with a discussion of how names are used to culturally structure our surroundings and interpret the world, and concludes with an analysis of names used in virtual settings. The virtual field has hitherto not received much interest among name researchers. In online games, chat rooms and web communities, names are not only useful and applicable, as they are in the so called real world; they are even more essential and important as it is mainly through their names participants recognise and identify each other. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
names, personal names, signatures, online games, we communities, nicknames, cultural meaning
host publication
Names and Identities
editor
Helleland, Botolv ; Ore, Christian-Emil and Wikstrøm, Solveig
volume
4
pages
81 - 93
publisher
Oslo Studies in Language
ISSN
1890-9639
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
fe09bba5-da77-4368-a98f-fcaf966bea0b (old id 3163237)
alternative location
https://www.journals.uio.no/index.php/osla/issue/view/39
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 13:33:37
date last changed
2018-11-21 20:17:26
@inbook{fe09bba5-da77-4368-a98f-fcaf966bea0b,
  abstract     = {{Every day we talk and speak and chat to people. We write and listen to each other, refer to each other, describe to each other what we and others have done and said. Doing this, we sometimes use our given names, sometimes we go by our nicknames, which often indicate or clarify who we are or are made up by ourselves to draw other people’s attention. Nicknames can be official or informal, known by many or only by a few, real monikers or made up pseudonyms or signatures. Where ever there are people there are names, since names are and have always been part of human life. Sociologist Richard D. Alford states that ethnographic research has not found a single society whose members do not have names (1988:1). Names are cultural universals, something all humans have in common, no matter where or when they live.<br/><br>
This article focuses on personal names and naming from a cultural ethnographic perspective. It begins with reflections on the link between name and self, continues with a discussion of how names are used to culturally structure our surroundings and interpret the world, and concludes with an analysis of names used in virtual settings. The virtual field has hitherto not received much interest among name researchers. In online games, chat rooms and web communities, names are not only useful and applicable, as they are in the so called real world; they are even more essential and important as it is mainly through their names participants recognise and identify each other.}},
  author       = {{Hagström, Charlotte}},
  booktitle    = {{Names and Identities}},
  editor       = {{Helleland, Botolv and Ore, Christian-Emil and Wikstrøm, Solveig}},
  issn         = {{1890-9639}},
  keywords     = {{names; personal names; signatures; online games; we communities; nicknames; cultural meaning}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{81--93}},
  publisher    = {{Oslo Studies in Language}},
  title        = {{Naming me, naming you. Personal names, online signatures and cultural meaning}},
  url          = {{https://www.journals.uio.no/index.php/osla/issue/view/39}},
  volume       = {{4}},
  year         = {{2012}},
}