Several names, several identities? The orthography of Finnish country people’s names from the 18th to 20th centuries
Kotilainen, S. (2013). Several names, several identities? The orthography of Finnish country people’s names from the 18th to 20th centuries. In A.-C. Edlund, & S. Haugen (Eds.), Människor som skriver. Perspektiv på vardagligt skriftbruk och identitet (pp. 65 - 78). Umeå universitet. Institutionen för nordiska språk. Nordliga studier; Vardagligt skriftbruk, 4; 2.
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Nordliga studier; Vardagligt skriftbrukAuthors
Date
2013Copyright
© Kotilainen & serierna Nordliga studier och Vardagligt skriftbruk, Umeå universitet, 2013.
In this article, I shall examine how the personal names of the Finnish-speaking
population of rural Finland, who themselves were generally unable
to write, were written in Swedish equivalents in various documents in the
18th and 19th centuries, and how this influenced the formation of their identities.
The advent of laws governing language towards the end of the 19th and in the
early 20th century was manifested in official documents in which the authorities
gradually started to write personal names in Finnish. The population of
the countryside began to acquire the ability to write finally when compulsory
universal education came into force in 1921. Before that, the majority of the rural
population had signed documents by making their mark. At the turn of the 19th
and 20th centuries, marks and signatures were used to some extent side by side, so
therefore the use of a mark does not always indicate that the person was unable
to write. In the life of the rural people the different ways in which their names
were written were all part of their social identity.
...
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Umeå universitet. Institutionen för nordiska språkParent publication ISBN
978-91-88466-85-3Is part of publication
Människor som skriver. Perspektiv på vardagligt skriftbruk och identitetISSN Search the Publication Forum
2000-0391Keywords
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https://converis.jyu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/23060822
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