Names of Places
by
Book Details
About the Book
Toponymy (the scientific study of placenames) need not be dry science. Here Prof. Ashley (whom Distinguished Prof. Kelsie B. Harder in prefatory remarks calls "indeed the foremost authority in the study of names") ranges widely over Amerindian names of Massachusetts and several other states, the British-influenced placenames of Connecticut, saints’ names on the land of Cornwall, French surnames for the English derived from placenames, the varied placenames of the east (Vermont) and of the Midwest (Iowa and of Kansas) and the west (California) and the south (Louisiana), the commercial and cultural implications of New York City neighborhood names (SoHo and so on), placenames in catch phrases and folklore, evocative placenames in poetry, house names here and abroad, Montreal placenames of a bilingual city, street names of the Vieux Carré of New Orleans (which has been Spanish and French as well as American), the mestizismo of Mexico as reflected in the names derived from three cultures (aboriginal, Spanish colonial, and modern Mexican), what’s wrong with the Spanish placenames of California (as indicative of how placenaming can go wrong and how the US government handles names of US places), and the book concludes with a comparatively few pages of useful information that can greatly enhance the tourist’s travels in exotic Turkey (with no more knowledge of the language than is given here). There has never been any book which goes as deeply and entertainingly into so many aspects of placenaming and examines with copious examples and wit the unique power given to Adam and all his descendants to name the world in which they live, to claim it and order it and celebrate it.
About the Author
Leonard
R. N. Ashley, Ph.D. (Princeton), LHD (Columbia Theological, Hon.), is Professor
Emeritus of Brooklyn College of the
City University of New York, where he taught for nearly 35 years. He was
earlier on the faculties of the University of Utah, the University of
Rochester, and (part time) the New School for Social Research. He spent several
years in the Royal Canadian Air Force where, as second assistant to the Air
Historian, he wrote (for NORAD) the top-secret report on The Air Defence of North America. He has published extensively on
literary onomastics (how names function in imaginative writing and in popular
culture). Here he addresses names in their most scientific aspect, names of
places, but he relates them to everyday life for the non-specialist reader.
Ashley’s
published works range from military history (collaboration on A Military History of Modern China, authorship
of Ripley’s “Believe It Or Not” Book of
The Military) and critical biography (Colley
Cibber and George Peele) to
literary history (Authorship and Evidence
in Renaissance Drama and Elizabethan
Popular Culture) and linguistics (What’s
in a Name? and co-editorship of the proceedings of half a dozen
international conferences he directed for The American Society of Geolinguistics...of
which he has been repeatedly elected president since 1991). He is the author of numerous textbooks and
anthologies such as Other People’s Lives,
Mirrors for Man, Nineteenth-Century British Drama, and Tales of Mystery and Melodrama. Recently he has written a series of
ten books on the occult published by Barricade Books (New York) and reprinted
by several British publishers and in Dutch and German translations. These books
are: The Complete Book of Superstition,
Prophecy, and Luck; The Complete Book of Magic and Witchcraft; The Complete
Book of Devils and Demons; The Complete Book of the Devil’s Disciples; The
Complete Book of Spells, Curses, and Magical Recipes; The Complete Book of
Vampires; The Complete Book of Werewolves; The Complete Book of Dreams and What
They Mean; and The Complete Book of
Sex Magic. He has published poetry
in more than 60 “little magazines” and anthologies, more than 150 scholarly
articles in journals, especially Names (the
journal of The American Name Society, to whose executive board he has been
continually re-elected for two decades and of which society he has been twice
elected president). He refounded the Place Name Survey of the United States (on
one of those two occasions he was president of The American Name Society) and
contributed to Frank Abate’s massive Omni
Gazetteer of the United States. Ashley’s regular chronique, reviewing
books on The Renaissance, has been for more than 20 years a feature of Bibliothèque d’Humanisme et Renaissance (Geneva). His Dictionary
of Sex Slang, in preparation for more than 20 years, is now in press. He has contributed to a great many standard
works on literature such as Freedley & Reeves’ History of the Theatre, the series Great Writers of the English Language, Readers Guide to World Drama,
Reference Guide to American Literature,
Encyclopedia USA, Encyclopedia of British Humorists, Encyclopedia of British Women Writers, Dictionary of Literary
Biography, New Dictionary of National Biography, and other reference
books. He has edited The Reliques of Irish Poetry, The Ballad
Poetry of Ireland, Shakespeare’s Jest Book, and other works and has
recently written on topics ranging from the diaries of Anaïs Nin (in Anaïs: An International Journal) to
Victorian literature for boys (his George
Alfred Henty and the Victorian Mind).
Placenames especially fascinate him and he is able to add to what
geographers bring his knowledge of literature and folklore.
Names of Places has companion volumes from
this author called Names in Literature,
Art Attack: Essays on Names in Satire, and Names in Popular Culture. As the ten volumes on the occult add up
to a kind of encyclopedia of that subject, so the four books on names mentioned
here add up to a set on the art and science of onomomastics to go along with
Ashley’s pioneering general survey of the whole field (What’s in a Name?, 1989, revised 1995). Ashley has recently edited
the previously unpublished placename studies of Prof. Allen Walker Read, the
dean of American placename study who began with a study of some names on the
land in Iowa as a master’s thesis in 1926, in America: Naming the Country and Its People. Ashley’s latest book is
on geolinguistics (of which he is the foremost US scholar), Language and Modern Society (published
in the UK, the US, and India). Forthcoming soon from Ashley are more on names
(specialized books respectively on the placenames of Cornwall, Mexico, and
Turkey, designed for travelers in those areas) and a major book on Scandinavian
folklore and popular culture (with Ola J. Holten), years in preparation.
This
present books also represents many years of research and writing, all of it
here revised for the general reader and presented in an amusing, relaxed and
personal style.