Publication | Open Access
Naming a New Self: Identity Elasticity and Self-Definition in Voluntary Name Changes
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Citations
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2012
Year
EthnicitySocial PsychologyEducationSelf IdentityUnited StatesCultural StudiesPsychologySocial SciencesIdentity Studies (Intersectionality Studies)Cultural IdentityPersonal IdentityAmerican IdentityIdentity IssueSocial IdentitySelf-awarenessIdentity PoliticsVoluntary Name ChangesApplied Social PsychologySocial Identity TheoryIdentity Studies (Memory Studies)Collective SelfNarrative ElasticityCultureNew SelfSelf-conceptCulture ChangeAnthropologySocial AnthropologyIdentity Elasticity
AbstractThis article considers how personal name changes are situated within their sociological context in the United States. Reviewing both popular and scholarly texts on names and name changes, I draw on recent work on identity and narrative by Oriana to argue that voluntary personal name changes are made in relation to a sense of narrative elasticity or identity elasticity, and act symbolically to make a shifting identity or self-narrative manifest in the social context. Drawing out these themes through an exploration of name changes for ethnic self-definition or religious purposes, I conclude with a reflection on the unstable social balance between an individual’s interest in self-expression and society’s priority on the stable identification of persons within a given social sphere.
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