Street Names through Sociological Lenses. Part I: Functionalism and Conflict Theory

Author:

Rusu Mihai Stelian1

Affiliation:

1. Lucian Blaga University of Sibiu , Department of Social Work, Journalism, Public Relations, and Sociology , 2A Lucian Blaga , Sibiu , Romania .

Abstract

Abstract Street names are mundane spatial markers that besides providing a sense of orientation inscribe onto the landscape the ideological ethos and political symbols of hegemonic discourses. This review article takes stock of the existing scholarship done on the politics of street naming practices in human (political, cultural, and social) geography and rethinks these insights from sociological perspectives. Drawing on Randall Collins’ taxonomy of sociological theory, the paper interprets urban street nomenclatures along functionalist, conflictualist, constructionist, and utilitarian lines. The analysis is delivered in two installments: Part I addresses urban nomenclatures from functionalist and conflictualist perspectives, while Part II (published in the next issue of this journal) approaches street names as social constructions and examines their utilitarian value. In doing so, the paper advances the argument that urban namescapes in general and street names in particular should make an important object of sociological reflection and empirical analysis. It is one of the key arguments developed in this paper that toponymy encapsulates broader and intersecting issues of power, memory, identity, language, and space which can be rendered visible through sociological analysis.

Publisher

Walter de Gruyter GmbH

Reference82 articles.

1. Alderman, Derek and Joshua Inwood. 2013. ‘Street Naming and the Politics of Belonging: Spatial Injustices in the Toponymic Commemoration of Martin Luther King Jr’. Social & Cultural Geography, 14(2): 211-233.

2. Alderman, Derek. 2002. ‘School Names as Cultural Arenas: The Naming of U.S. Public Schools after Martin Luther King, Jr’. Urban Geography, 23(7): 601-626.

3. Althusser, Louis. 1970. ‘Ideology and Ideological State Apparatuses (Notes towards an Investigation)’. In Lenin and Philosophy and Other Essays. New York, NY: Monthly Review Press.

4. Azaryahu, Maoz. 1990. ‘Renaming the Past: Changes in “City Text” in Germany and Austria, 1945-1947’. History and Memory, 2(2): 32-53.

5. Azaryahu, Maoz. 1996. ‘The Power of Commemorative Street Names’. Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, 14: 311-330.

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