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Periodical article Periodical article Leiden University catalogue Leiden University catalogue WorldCat catalogue WorldCat
Title:Cultural contact and change in naming practices among the Aari of southwest Ethiopia
Author:Gebre, YntisoISNI
Year:2010
Periodical:Journal of African Cultural Studies (ISSN 1369-6815)
Volume:22
Issue:2
Pages:183-194
Language:English
Geographic term:Ethiopia
Subjects:Aari
personal names
culture contact
Amharic language
External link:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/13696815.2010.506387
Abstract:When people of different cultures interact, a degree of linguistic and/or cultural adaptation is expected. This paper examines the implication of the relationship between the Aari and the Gama for the naming practices of the former. The Aari people, who speak Araf, came into contact with Amharic-speaking migrants from central and northern Ethiopia (collectively called the Gama) during the southward expansion of Emperor Menelik in the late nineteenth century. Traditionally, the Aari people used names to express their collective history, shared life experiences, major events, and their environment. The incorporation of Aariland into the Ethiopian empire led to economic, political, and cultural domination as well as resistance on the part of the Aari. Personal names that characterize the period of struggle against the dominant migrants became common until the 1974 revolution that ended the Gama hegemony. Afterwards, however, the naming tradition suffered a setback as evidenced in the decline of Aari personal names in favour of Amhara names and the alteration of the spelling and pronunciation of Aari names. The new changes in naming practices compromised the role of the Aari language as an expression of culture and a marker of identity. Bibliogr., notes, ref., sum. [Journal abstract]
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