Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- 1 “Entangled in Histories”: An Introduction to the Anthropology of Names and Naming
- 2 “Your Child Deserves a Name”: Possessive Individualism and the Politics of Memory in Pregnancy Loss
- 3 Why the Dead Do Not Bear Names: The Orokaiva Name System
- 4 The Substance of Northwest Amazonian Names
- 5 Teknonymy and the Evocation of the “Social” Among the Zafimaniry of Madagascar
- 6 What's in a Name? Name Bestowal and the Identity of Spirits in Mayotte and Northwest Madagascar
- 7 Calling into Being: Naming and Speaking Names on Alaska's North Slope
- 8 On Being Named and Not Named: Authority, Persons, and Their Names in Mongolia
- 9 Injurious Names: Naming, Disavowal, and Recuperation in Contexts of Slavery and Emancipation
- 10 Where Names Fall Short: Names as Performances in Contemporary Urban South Africa
- 11 Names as Bodily Signs
- Bibliography
- Index
11 - Names as Bodily Signs
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 August 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Preface and Acknowledgments
- 1 “Entangled in Histories”: An Introduction to the Anthropology of Names and Naming
- 2 “Your Child Deserves a Name”: Possessive Individualism and the Politics of Memory in Pregnancy Loss
- 3 Why the Dead Do Not Bear Names: The Orokaiva Name System
- 4 The Substance of Northwest Amazonian Names
- 5 Teknonymy and the Evocation of the “Social” Among the Zafimaniry of Madagascar
- 6 What's in a Name? Name Bestowal and the Identity of Spirits in Mayotte and Northwest Madagascar
- 7 Calling into Being: Naming and Speaking Names on Alaska's North Slope
- 8 On Being Named and Not Named: Authority, Persons, and Their Names in Mongolia
- 9 Injurious Names: Naming, Disavowal, and Recuperation in Contexts of Slavery and Emancipation
- 10 Where Names Fall Short: Names as Performances in Contemporary Urban South Africa
- 11 Names as Bodily Signs
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
“Can we understand two names without knowing whether they designate the same object or two different objects?”
WittgensteinTaher Ben Jelloun's novel L'enfant de sable (1985) familiarized us with biological females who are given male names and brought up as boys. In the novel, after his wife gives birth to several girls, a man decides that regardless of one of the children's anatomical features, it will grow up as a boy. The “boy,” Ahmad, has a faked circumcision ceremony arranged for him, and he marries a crippled girl. His “true” sex is revealed only after his death. Ben Jelloun describes the horrific scene when the corpse washers, on discovering that he is a “woman,” leave the house screaming. It is only then that Ahmad's sisters find out that they never had a “brother.” The novel's message is that gendering by way of calling people names was ultimately challenged on the man's deathbed.
I begin with Ben Jelloun's novel because it alludes to the old question about the constitutive power of names, which has occupied philosophers such as Wittgenstein (1977, 1978). More recently, social scientists have raised questions about how subjects are brought into existence and classified through speech acts such as naming. For example, according to Bourdieu, the “act of naming [is] a specifically social judgment of attribution which assigns to the person involved everything that is inscribed in a social definition.”
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- An Anthropology of Names and Naming , pp. 225 - 250Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006
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