The practice of tracing family naming patterns and cultural meanings through generations to understand inherited identity and cultural continuity.
Names carry genealogies—they connect us to ancestors, to places, to cultural moments, to family struggles and triumphs. When colonial systems forced name changes, they broke genealogical continuity. Sor Juana's own name represented both her Spanish colonial context and her Mexican heritage, embodying the hybrid genealogy of colonized peoples. Understanding one's genealogy of names means researching who in your family line held particular names, what those names meant in their original languages and contexts, and how naming practices shifted across generations due to migration, colonization, or family choices. This work can reveal hidden histories—names that were changed at borders, names that were deliberately preserved despite pressure to abandon them, names that honor ancestors or protest colonial rule. For many people, genealogical name work becomes a form of identity reclamation and healing. It connects individual naming to larger historical patterns, showing how personal identity choices participate in cultural survival and resistance. Tracing genealogies transforms personal names into historical documents of family and cultural endurance.
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