What Afrikan Names May (or May Not) Tell Us About the State of Pan-Afrikanism
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Date
2019-08-29
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Journal of Black Studies
Abstract
Names are important to Afrikan=Black people of the continent and diaspora
as, traditionally, one’s name is seen as playing a crucial role in the fulfillment
(or lack thereof) of one’s life purpose. However, due to enslavement and
neo-enslavement in the diaspora as well as colonialism and neo-colonialism
on the continent, many Afrikan=Black people now give their children the
names of their enslavers or colonial enemies. In this article, we utilize a
comparative anthroponymic analysis making use of case studies from two
institutions, namely, the Institute of African Studies (IAS)–University of Ghana
at Legon and Abibitumi Kasa, with locations in Raleigh, North Carolina, and
Accra, Ghana, in order to observe how some Afrikan=Black people adopt
Eurasian names and/or reclaim Afrikan names, as well as the forms such
names take. In our findings, we observe that in the case of names from
Abibitumi Kasa, pulling largely from the diaspora, Afrikan=Black individuals
tend to have names from all over the Afrikan world whereby the first name
may be from one cultural-linguistic group while the surname is from another.
There also may be a disparity whereby a preferred Afrikan=Black name may
be different from one’s “legal” name, which may still be Eurasian. In the case
of IAS, we find that names tend to be either from colonial enemies, a single
Afrikan cultural-linguistic group, or a mixture of these two. In conclusion,
we argue that these tendencies of the continent and the diaspora as represented by these two Afrikan=Black institutions may serve as a litmus
test for understanding the current state of Pan-Afrikanism
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Afrikan names, Pan-Afrikanism,, Abibitumi Kasa, Institute of African Studies, Neo-enslavement, Neo-colonialism