RACIAL-DIFFERENCES IN 1ST NAMES IN 1910

Citation
As. London et Sp. Morgan, RACIAL-DIFFERENCES IN 1ST NAMES IN 1910, Journal of family history, 19(3), 1994, pp. 261-284
Citations number
50
Categorie Soggetti
Anthropology,"Family Studies
Journal title
ISSN journal
03631990
Volume
19
Issue
3
Year of publication
1994
Pages
261 - 284
Database
ISI
SICI code
0363-1990(1994)19:3<261:RI1NI1>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
This research examines concentration and similarity in the first name distributions of African Americans and whites resident in Mississippi in 1910. Data are drawn from the Public Use Sample of the 1910 Census, with names added from microfilm copies of original Census manuscripts . We find little difference in the degree of concentration of the name distributions and only modest dissimilarity in name choice. Multivari ate analysis using age as a proxy for period of name assignment (birth cohort) indicates that racial differentiation in name choice increase d over the period 1870 to 1910 primarily as a result of changes in the name choices of whites. We discuss these results in conjunction with the recent work of Lieberson and Bell (1992) on contemporary racial di fferences in naming patterns. Lieberson and Bell (1992) argue that Afr ican Americans in the contemporary period emphasize group differences by choosing ''African'' or ''African sounding'' names. In Mississippi in the period between the abolition of slavery and 1910, we argue that whites distanced themselves from African Americans by choosing increa singly the ''whitest'' names (e.g., those disproportionately chosen by whites). Changing naming patterns are not orchestrated group response s. Instead, they reflect emergent cultural responses to fundamental so cial change.