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Culture Study Podcast

The Sociology of Baby Names

Culture Study Podcast

Culture Study Podcast

Arts, Society & Culture

4.5789 Ratings

🗓️ 25 February 2026

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Baby names are in inexhaustible cultural text. They're a way to talk about class, race, and gender, of course — but also the way we perform familial respect and coherence. In this episode, sociologist Hannah Emery — who wrote her dissertation on baby names — joins us to talk about the history of baby names, how naming conventions and aspirations have changed over the last century, and the broad and specific requests parents bring to her as a naming consultant. It's all fascinating — and I can't wait to continue the conversation (about our names and the names of the children in our lives) in the comments. AND GREAT NEWS: WE HAVE VERY GOOD EPISODE TRANSCRIPTS NOW! They come out within 24 hours of the pod, so you just have to be a little patient and then come back and click here. We pay an actual human for help with these, so thank you for either being a paid subscriber or listening to the ads that make this model possible!If you're a paid subscriber and haven't yet set up your subscriber RSS feed in your podcast player, here's the EXTREMELY easy how-to .And if you're having any other issues with your Patreon subscription — please get in touch! Email me at annehelenpetersen @ gmail OR submit a request to Patreon Support. Thank you for making the switch with us — the podcast in particular is much more at home here!Thanks to the sponsors of today's episode!Save 20% Off Honeylove by going to honeylove.com/CULTUREGet 15% off OneSkin with the code CULTURE at https://www.oneskin.co/CULTURETreat your dog with Ollie! Go to ollie.com/culture and use code CULTURE to get 60% off your first boxHead to moshlife.com/CULTURE to save 20% off plus FREE shipping on the Best sellers Trial Pack or the NEW plant-based trial packShow Notes:You can find Hannah's fascinating name newsletter here (Try starting with this piece on middle names)I put Melody's name graph up top but here's mine (you can find yours for the U.S. here)The Top U.S. Names of 2025 According to BabyCenter: This made me laugh We're currently looking for your questions for future episodes about:HILARY DUFF!!! The comeback, the new album, let's talk about all of it — with Hilary Duff expert/forever-fan ALLIE JONES (also Melody loves Hilary Duff so much and will be very sad if we don't get enough questions for this episode) Dark academia — the trends, the themes, the popularity, whatever you want (for an episode with R.F. Kuang!) Conversion Therapy (how it affects people late into life, how it still exists, etc. etc.) Your Parent(s) Died — How Do You Deal with All This PAPERWORK and bureaucracy??? (with death doula Becky Robison) KID INFLUENCERS — what happens when your parent puts you on camera before you can really consent? We're talking with the author of a new book about the ramifications of growing up within these worlds — it's gonna be so good. Anything you need advice or want musings on for the AAA segment. You can ask about anything, it’s literally the name of the segmentAs always, you can submit your questions (and ideas for future eps) hereFor this week’s discussion: What names still bewilder you? Let's talk about them!

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This is the Culture Study podcast, and I'm Ann Helen Peterson.

0:10.8

And I'm Hannah Emery.

0:11.8

I'm a baby name expert.

0:13.3

I have a PhD in sociology, and I run a name consulting business called Janus Name Journeys.

0:20.4

Thank you so much for coming on the show. I'm so excited. We've had so many people ask for

0:25.9

a show in this realm. It's an area of sociology where people find themselves. They're like,

0:32.8

there's something going on here and I don't really have the tools to talk about it. But like,

0:37.0

I know that there's something going on here. What is going on here and I don't really have the tools to talk about it, but like I know that there's

0:38.2

something going on here. What is going on here? So we're very excited to have someone who specializes

0:43.6

in this. Sort of like me, you have a dissertation that people are like, oh, I didn't know you could

0:48.0

write a dissertation on that. And you're like, yeah, yeah, you can write a dissertation on basically

0:52.2

anything as long as it's interesting. So how did you first get interested in names?

0:58.4

Well, so I've been interested in names since I was a kid. I was definitely like the eight-year-old child standing in the parenting section of B. Dalton in 1991.

1:12.6

Yeah, and yeah, you know, I had a large collection of secondhand paddock patch dolls that I very carefully picked first and middle names for them because, you know, that's how cabbage patch dolls work.

1:22.6

But they came with a birth certificate.

1:24.6

I have a...

1:25.6

Not if you bought them at a flea market.

1:26.6

They did. Very true. But yes, I was born in 1983, so I have a... Not if you bought them at a flea market.

1:28.6

Very true.

1:40.3

But yes, I was born in 1983, so I did have the, the, you know, my grandmother was brawling people in Toys R Us to get me the authentic Diana Adria was her name.

1:42.6

Wow.

1:47.5

But I'm also a fiction writer, so I think I had thought of it more as sort of an addendum to that.

...

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