The Ju/\u27hoansi (!Kung) of Namibia and Botswana are unusual for the strong norm to name children exclusively for kin and primarily for grandparents. Naming carries important significance by linking the two namesakes and because names are a basis for extending fictive kin links. In the 1950s Lorna Marshall reported that the father has the right to name children and that he invariably named them for the paternal grandparents, although having the option of naming children born later for his wife\u27s parents. The authors used a large database of genealogical information that was collected nearly concurrently with Marshall\u27s report to test the strength of the naming rule and found that approximately 70 per cent of men name the first-born...
Persistent interest lies in gender inequality, especially with regard to the favouring of sons over ...
Abstract In Zulu society, naming is seen as a family business where not any member of the family can...
International audienceIn this text, I discuss the methodological framework of my research on naming ...
The Ju/\u27hoansi (!Kung) of Namibia and Botswana are unusual for the strong norm to name children e...
Current Western tradition dictates that a woman is to take her husband’s surname upon marriage and p...
The art and science of naming (also known as onomastics) is a broad area that cannot be confined wit...
The study of naming practices has captured the interest of researchers in a variety of related disci...
Matrilineal systems in sub-Saharan Africa tend to co-occur with horticulture and are rare among past...
This article investigates the naming practice of the GÇ ui and GÇ ana Khôespeaking people, inhabiti...
The theoretical framework used in the present form is Gender Construction in content analysis. The r...
The classification of kin into structured groups is a diverse phenomenon which is ubiquitous in huma...
Persistent interest lies in gender inequality, especially with regard to the favouring of sons over ...
Bakossi names are generally inherited and are a strong bond for the cultural identity of the people....
In rural Maharashtra, many parents have named their daughters "Nakusa/Nakoshi." In Marathi that mean...
Datooga speakers often use the word íiyá ‘mother’ to address children. Given the denotational meanin...
Persistent interest lies in gender inequality, especially with regard to the favouring of sons over ...
Abstract In Zulu society, naming is seen as a family business where not any member of the family can...
International audienceIn this text, I discuss the methodological framework of my research on naming ...
The Ju/\u27hoansi (!Kung) of Namibia and Botswana are unusual for the strong norm to name children e...
Current Western tradition dictates that a woman is to take her husband’s surname upon marriage and p...
The art and science of naming (also known as onomastics) is a broad area that cannot be confined wit...
The study of naming practices has captured the interest of researchers in a variety of related disci...
Matrilineal systems in sub-Saharan Africa tend to co-occur with horticulture and are rare among past...
This article investigates the naming practice of the GÇ ui and GÇ ana Khôespeaking people, inhabiti...
The theoretical framework used in the present form is Gender Construction in content analysis. The r...
The classification of kin into structured groups is a diverse phenomenon which is ubiquitous in huma...
Persistent interest lies in gender inequality, especially with regard to the favouring of sons over ...
Bakossi names are generally inherited and are a strong bond for the cultural identity of the people....
In rural Maharashtra, many parents have named their daughters "Nakusa/Nakoshi." In Marathi that mean...
Datooga speakers often use the word íiyá ‘mother’ to address children. Given the denotational meanin...
Persistent interest lies in gender inequality, especially with regard to the favouring of sons over ...
Abstract In Zulu society, naming is seen as a family business where not any member of the family can...
International audienceIn this text, I discuss the methodological framework of my research on naming ...