Mutability and stagnancy of place names

the case of the State of Indiana

Autores

  • Jörn Seemann Ball State University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.21579/issn.2526-0375_2021_n2_254-266

Palavras-chave:

Place name changes, place name history, critical toponomy studies, nineteenth-century United States, State of Indiana

Resumo

Studies on toponyms frequently focus on name changes, but rarely address places that persist with their traditional names. The case of the State of Indiana in the United States is presented as an example of a space whose place names were predominantly defined in the nineteenth century and that continues reproducing the values, politics, and history of the European colonizers and the American independence and democracy movement from the past. Frozen in time, Indiana toponyms do not correspond to the multi-cultural and multi-racial configuration of today’s society and are unlikely to change in the future, though renaming is far more common on the local level (e.g., streets and schools) rather than for larger administrative units such as counties and towns.

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Publicado

2022-04-28

Edição

Seção

Trabalhos do II SIPAT 2021