内战前黑人名字的词根

L. Cook, John M. Parman, Trevon Logan
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引用次数: 6

摘要

摘要:本文探讨了南北战争前黑人名字的存在。最近的研究记录了19世纪末和20世纪初非洲裔美国男性的国家命名模式的存在(Cook, Logan, and Parman, Explorations in Economic History 53:64-82, 2014),我们分析了三个不同的、新颖的战前数据来源,并揭示了三个风格化的事实。首先,库克、洛根和帕尔曼利用内战后的数据确定的黑人名字是解放前黑人的常见名字。其次,这些黑人的名字在南北战争前具有种族特色。第三,从19世纪初到南北战争时期,这些名字的种族特征有所增加。综上所述,这些事实为以下说法提供了支持:黑人命名模式在南北战争前就存在,而命名模式中的种族差异早在解放奴隶之前就已确立。这些发现进一步挑战了黑人名字是20世纪民权运动等现象的产物的观点。
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The antebellum roots of distinctively black names
Abstract This paper explores the existence of distinctively Black names in the antebellum era. Building on recent research that documents the existence of a national naming pattern for African American males in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries (Cook, Logan, and Parman, Explorations in Economic History 53:64–82, 2014), we analyze three distinct and novel antebellum data sources and uncover three stylized facts. First, the Black names identified by Cook, Logan and Parman using post-Civil War data are common names among Blacks before Emancipation. Second, these same Black names are racially distinctive in the antebellum period. Third, the racial distinctiveness of the names increases from the early 1800s to the time of the Civil War. Taken together, these facts provide support for the claim that Black naming patterns existed in the antebellum era and that racial distinctiveness in naming patterns was an established practice well before Emancipation. These findings further challenge the view that Black names are a product of twentieth century phenomena such as the Civil Rights Movement.
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