Place Names in Multicultural Societies

It is not unthinkable that in a not too distant future, citizens of Oslo will have the opportunity to meet for appointments at Salimi Square, to shop for vegetables in Kharian Street, to enjoy their picnics in Rubina Rana Park and to drive to the nearby town of Drammen on Mogadishu Road. Historical...

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Main Author: Thomas Hylland Eriksen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Oslo 2012-07-01
Series:Oslo Studies in Language
Online Access:https://journals.uio.no/osla/article/view/311
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spelling doaj-2754d4f50cba4af3adc6bda4181c86e92020-11-25T03:40:31ZengUniversity of OsloOslo Studies in Language1890-96392012-07-014210.5617/osla.311Place Names in Multicultural SocietiesThomas Hylland Eriksen0University of OsloIt is not unthinkable that in a not too distant future, citizens of Oslo will have the opportunity to meet for appointments at Salimi Square, to shop for vegetables in Kharian Street, to enjoy their picnics in Rubina Rana Park and to drive to the nearby town of Drammen on Mogadishu Road. Historical change may lead to politically motivated changes in place names, although often slow and uneven, and major upheavals such as revolutions tend to entail a total renovation of the names of streets, parks and other urban fixtures. The names of towns and villages tend to stick more stubbornly. This short essay looks at these three modes, drawing on exam- ples from Tehran, Trinidad and Toronto, eventually relating them ten- tatively to the emergent multiethnic reality in Oslo and the future prospects for place names in the city.https://journals.uio.no/osla/article/view/311
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Thomas Hylland Eriksen
spellingShingle Thomas Hylland Eriksen
Place Names in Multicultural Societies
Oslo Studies in Language
author_facet Thomas Hylland Eriksen
author_sort Thomas Hylland Eriksen
title Place Names in Multicultural Societies
title_short Place Names in Multicultural Societies
title_full Place Names in Multicultural Societies
title_fullStr Place Names in Multicultural Societies
title_full_unstemmed Place Names in Multicultural Societies
title_sort place names in multicultural societies
publisher University of Oslo
series Oslo Studies in Language
issn 1890-9639
publishDate 2012-07-01
description It is not unthinkable that in a not too distant future, citizens of Oslo will have the opportunity to meet for appointments at Salimi Square, to shop for vegetables in Kharian Street, to enjoy their picnics in Rubina Rana Park and to drive to the nearby town of Drammen on Mogadishu Road. Historical change may lead to politically motivated changes in place names, although often slow and uneven, and major upheavals such as revolutions tend to entail a total renovation of the names of streets, parks and other urban fixtures. The names of towns and villages tend to stick more stubbornly. This short essay looks at these three modes, drawing on exam- ples from Tehran, Trinidad and Toronto, eventually relating them ten- tatively to the emergent multiethnic reality in Oslo and the future prospects for place names in the city.
url https://journals.uio.no/osla/article/view/311
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