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E-book: Literary Onomastics

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Literary Onomastics surveys different methods of studying names in works of literature and offers representative works of literary onomastic analysis. Included in this volume are qualitative studies that examine select names as well as quantitative studies that examine entire systems of names. These studies of literary names straddle centuries, cross genres, and defy simple categorization. Leading and emerging scholars in this field provide insight into the namecraft of William Shakespeare, Philip Sidney, John Donne, Julia Alvarez, Ursula K. Le Guin, Zadie Smith, George R. R. Martin, and Britain's Rebel Writers. The theories and methods they employ are associated with cultural, linguistic, rhetorical, feminist, and ethnic studies. Collectively, these scholars demonstrate the many approaches available to the study of names and naming practices in literary works. Additionally, they consider how names function in a variety of genres and mediums, including poetry, novels, science fiction, and fantasy.

Reviews

No one is better prepared than Dorothy Dodge Robbins to present a survey of the study of names in literature. Having recently served for two years as president of the American Name Society, Dr. Robbins really knows the current trends in language and literature, and has collected a first-rate group of contributors writing on a variety of salient subjects. Offering precise tools and new research, Literary Onomastics is an excellent introduction for those unfamiliar with onomastics as well as a very useful read for the experienced scholar. -- Grant Smith, professor emeritus, Eastern Washington University This excellent volume makes a strong contribution to the study of names in literature. Individually, the essays offer new insights into selected texts from different genres; collectively, they showcase a range of approaches within the field. All are interesting and enjoyable to read, combining rigorous scholarship with clarity of style. -- Carole Hough, University of Glasgow

Chapter 1: Approaches to Literary Onomastics

Chapter 2: Naming as Self Reference in Poems by Sidney, Shakespeare, and
Donne

Chapter 3: Proclaiming Names in Julia Alvarezs In the Time of the
Butterflies

Chapter 4: Onomastic Metaphor: The Rhetoric of Right Names in A Wizard of
Earthsea

Chapter 5: First and last names on a direct collision course: Immigrant
Naming Strategies, Ethnic Identities, and Cultural Assimilation in Zadie
Smiths White Teeth

Chapter 6: Names and World-Building in George R.R. Martins A Song of Ice and
Fire and Game of Thrones

Chapter 7: Angry Young Women and Rebel Writers: The Naming of a Female
Literary Movement
Dorothy Dodge Robbins is the Charlotte Lewis Endowed Professor of English at Louisiana Tech University.