Colours in the community
- 
            
            
        Ellen Bramwell
        
 
Abstract
The hundred most common surnames in Scotland include seven colour terms. Surnames developed from bynames, as extra names given to individuals to distinguish them from others of the same name. Bynames are still in use within some communities, including in some areas of Scotland. By investigating how colours are used in bynaming in a present-day community and comparing this diachronically with the colour bynames from which some surnames originated, it is possible to gain an insight into how people use colours in naming more generally. Interviews were used to investigate bynames synchronically in a close-knit community in the Western Isles of Scotland. This is a bilingual community where both Scottish Gaelic and English are spoken. Gaining examples from interviews, rather than written records, allows for a firmer understanding of why these names were bestowed. This can contribute towards explaining why and how colours were assigned to people in the past.
Abstract
The hundred most common surnames in Scotland include seven colour terms. Surnames developed from bynames, as extra names given to individuals to distinguish them from others of the same name. Bynames are still in use within some communities, including in some areas of Scotland. By investigating how colours are used in bynaming in a present-day community and comparing this diachronically with the colour bynames from which some surnames originated, it is possible to gain an insight into how people use colours in naming more generally. Interviews were used to investigate bynames synchronically in a close-knit community in the Western Isles of Scotland. This is a bilingual community where both Scottish Gaelic and English are spoken. Gaining examples from interviews, rather than written records, allows for a firmer understanding of why these names were bestowed. This can contribute towards explaining why and how colours were assigned to people in the past.
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
 - Table of contents v
 - Preface ix
 - Abbreviations xi
 - 
                            Section 1. Theoretical issues
 - Illusions of colour and shadow 3
 - Universal trends and specific deviations 13
 - Touchy-Feely colour 27
 - Towards a semiotic theory of basic colour terms and the semiotics of Juri Lotman 39
 - 
                            Section 2. Languages of the world
 - Preface to Section 2 51
 - Basic colour terms of Arabic 53
 - Red herrings in a sea of data 59
 - Towards a diachrony of Maltese basic colour terms 73
 - Rosa Schätze – Pink zum kaufen 91
 - Kashubian colour vocabulary 105
 - Colour terms 121
 - Preliminary research on Turkish basic colour terms with an emphasis on blue 133
 - Terms for red in Central Europe 147
 - 
                            Section 3. Colour in society
 - Preface to Section 3 159
 - Colours in the community 161
 - Hues and cries 171
 - Colour appearance in urban chromatic studies 181
 - Aspects of armorial colours and their perception in medieval literature 191
 - Warm, cool, light, dark, or afterimage 205
 - The power of colour term precision 219
 - 
                            Section 4. Categorical perception of colour
 - Preface to Section 4 235
 - Investigating the underlying mechanisms of categorical perception of colour using the event-related potential technique 237
 - Category training affects colour discrimination but only in the right visual field 251
 - Effects of stimulus range on color categorization 265
 - 
                            Section 5. Individual differences in colour vision
 - Preface to Section 5 279
 - Colour and autism spectrum disorders 281
 - Red-Green dichromats’ use of basic colour terms 293
 - Synaesthesia in colour 309
 - Towards a phonetically-rich account of speech-sound → colour synaesthesia 319
 - Perceiving “grue” 329
 - 
                            Section 6. Colour preference and colour meaning
 - Preface to Section 6 345
 - Age-dependence of colour preference in the U.K. population 347
 - Ecological valence and human color preference 361
 - Look and learn 377
 - Effects of lightness and saturation on color associations in the Mexican population 389
 - Colour and emotion 395
 - Colors and color adjectives in the cortex 415
 - 
                            Section 7. Colour vision science
 - Preface to Section 7 431
 - Chromatic perceptual learning 433
 - Unique hues 445
 - A short note on visual balance judgements as a tool for colour appearance matching 457
 - Index 459
 
Chapters in this book
- Prelim pages i
 - Table of contents v
 - Preface ix
 - Abbreviations xi
 - 
                            Section 1. Theoretical issues
 - Illusions of colour and shadow 3
 - Universal trends and specific deviations 13
 - Touchy-Feely colour 27
 - Towards a semiotic theory of basic colour terms and the semiotics of Juri Lotman 39
 - 
                            Section 2. Languages of the world
 - Preface to Section 2 51
 - Basic colour terms of Arabic 53
 - Red herrings in a sea of data 59
 - Towards a diachrony of Maltese basic colour terms 73
 - Rosa Schätze – Pink zum kaufen 91
 - Kashubian colour vocabulary 105
 - Colour terms 121
 - Preliminary research on Turkish basic colour terms with an emphasis on blue 133
 - Terms for red in Central Europe 147
 - 
                            Section 3. Colour in society
 - Preface to Section 3 159
 - Colours in the community 161
 - Hues and cries 171
 - Colour appearance in urban chromatic studies 181
 - Aspects of armorial colours and their perception in medieval literature 191
 - Warm, cool, light, dark, or afterimage 205
 - The power of colour term precision 219
 - 
                            Section 4. Categorical perception of colour
 - Preface to Section 4 235
 - Investigating the underlying mechanisms of categorical perception of colour using the event-related potential technique 237
 - Category training affects colour discrimination but only in the right visual field 251
 - Effects of stimulus range on color categorization 265
 - 
                            Section 5. Individual differences in colour vision
 - Preface to Section 5 279
 - Colour and autism spectrum disorders 281
 - Red-Green dichromats’ use of basic colour terms 293
 - Synaesthesia in colour 309
 - Towards a phonetically-rich account of speech-sound → colour synaesthesia 319
 - Perceiving “grue” 329
 - 
                            Section 6. Colour preference and colour meaning
 - Preface to Section 6 345
 - Age-dependence of colour preference in the U.K. population 347
 - Ecological valence and human color preference 361
 - Look and learn 377
 - Effects of lightness and saturation on color associations in the Mexican population 389
 - Colour and emotion 395
 - Colors and color adjectives in the cortex 415
 - 
                            Section 7. Colour vision science
 - Preface to Section 7 431
 - Chromatic perceptual learning 433
 - Unique hues 445
 - A short note on visual balance judgements as a tool for colour appearance matching 457
 - Index 459