Christianity and the Gendering of Personal Names among the Bette in Southeastern Nigeria

Author:

Aboh Romanus1ORCID,Mensah Eyo23ORCID,Inyabri Idom1ORCID,Ushuple Lucy4ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of English & Literary Studies, University of Calabar Calabar Nigeria

2. Department of Linguistics, University of Calabar Calabar Nigeria

3. Merian Institute for Advanced Studies in Africa (MIASA), University of Ghana Legon Ghana

4. Department of Linguistics and Communication Studies, University of Calabar Calabar Nigeria

Abstract

Abstract Contributing to extant debates on the juncture of naming and gender(ing), this study interrogates naming practices among Bette-Christians of northern Cross River, Southeastern Nigeria, and how they enhance understanding of the relation between naming and the enunciation of religious identity as well as how gender is enacted. With analytical insights from socio-onomastic theory, which explores the relationship between names, culture, and society, we interrogate naming practices as essential cultural currency for identification, categorization, and connectedness. Data were obtained from 40 participants through semistructured interviews and participant observations. We focus on the intersection of naming and spiritual sentiments to argue that the contemporary reality of naming among Bette-Christians illuminates a practice that negates traditional Bette cosmology and cosmogony. We illustrate how the emergence of Christianity has altered the naming patterns and practices of the people, and how these names embody multidimensional connotations that range from religious identity to stereotyped gender ideologies.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Religious studies

Reference33 articles.

1. Beyond Loan Words: Bette-Bendi Ethnic Identity Construction in Liwhu Betiang’s Beneath the Rubble;Aboh, Romanus

2. Language and the Construction of Multiple Identities in the Nigerian Novel;Aboh, Romanus

3. Igbo Endearment Terms: In-group Identity Construction in Selected Novels by Achebe and Adichie;Aboh, Romanus

4. Groundwork of Obudu History (1600–1959);Adie, Michael

5. The Sociolinguistics of Akan Personal Names;Agyekum, K.

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