This paper examines the history of Black naming activism in the USA, focusing on the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) during the Civil Rights Movement. It argues that renaming practices are a significant political technology used by marginalized groups to assert their rights and identities. The authors analyze SNCC's onomastic tactics—the renaming of people, places, and institutions—as a form of activism that went beyond symbolic gestures, facilitating intelligence gathering, organizing transportation, and creating a revolutionary atmosphere. The paper concludes that renaming's efficacy comes from its integration with broader political practices and discourses, emphasizing that renaming alone is not liberation.
Publisher
Humanities & Social Sciences Communications
Published On
May 30, 2024
Authors
Derek H. Alderman, Joshua Inwood, Katrina Stack
Tags
Black naming activism
SNCC
Civil Rights Movement
renaming practices
political technology
onomastic tactics
identity assertion
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