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2019, What"s in a name? On language, history and place names in SVG
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3 pages
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This newspaper article presents a short study of toponyms in St Vincent and the Grenadines from sociohistorical and linguistic perspectives.
Voprosy onomastiki, 2023
The paper provides a critical review of a ten-chapter volume dealing with various aspects of the study of place names. Conceived as a concise but comprehensive reference source for students in toponomastics, the book has two distinct focuses, namely historical toponomastics (i.e. the study of place names within the framework of historical linguistics and contact language theory) and social toponomastics, but also covers the study of toponymy in the context of historical geography, language documentation, and cartography. Despite the fact that the book presents a good survey of some topics and contains relevant references to scholarly publications, which may be useful for students, it displays numerous issues in the chapters related to etymology, language change, and historical linguistics, which may give the readers a distorted idea of the research practices normally used in the corresponding sub-fields of toponomastics. In some cases, the analysis proposed in the book lacks arguments and further explanations, while in others, it is simply based on an a priori fallacy.
Placenames Australia, 2017
back onto the committee. (I'm happy to email the AGM papers to anyone who'd like a copy.) Congratulations to our ANPS Director, Jan Tent, whose article 'Indigenous toponyms in the Antipodes' has won the American Name Society's award for Best Article in Names, the society's journal. (See our website tab 'Published Articles' for a direct link to that paper.
Names: A Journal of Onomastics, 2021
A functional and systematic typology of toponyms is an essential instrument for the toponymist wishing to investigate the naming practices and patterns of a region or era. To this end, the Australian National Placenames Survey developed a toponym typology for Australia (Tent & Blair 2011). This was characterized as a “typology of motivations for naming”. Although various researchers have used this typology with seeming success, further application of the typology to the survey’s database of toponyms has revealed the need for a re-evaluation of the naming process. This has occasioned a modification of some toponym categories, generating a revised typology which can be considered a “typology of expressions of the naming intention.”
The Norfolk Island Archipelago offers researchers propitious instances relevant to toponymy and cartography. This position piece details the role and placement of toponyms as mappable cultural capital using the example of Phillip Island, a small island six kilometres south of Norfolk. Maps are presented and a toponymic hierarchy is defined and explicated. The hierarchy reveals Norf’k names – toponyms in the Norfolk Island language – exist as more ‘authentic’, i.e. Norf’k names are more highly valued by the community than English names.
Using the place-naming practices in the small settler society of Norfolk Island, the home of Anglo-Polynesian descendants of the Bounty mutineers, we advance a linguistic argument against Saussure's claims concerning the arbitrariness of signs. When extended to place names, Saussure's claims about language in general imply place names in themselves hold no significance for how people interact with places. In contrast, we use ethnographic examples to show that people of Norfolk Island interact with the significance of the names themselves. Arguments for an integrated approach to toponymy in which place names are considered alongside other relational (cultural, economic and historical) factors that influence their use and meaning are put forward. We propose 'toponymic ethnography' as a useful methodology for understanding the connectedness of toponyms to people, place, and social networks.
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