Tuesday, March 27, 2012

"Nomen est omen"...Name is destiny

Walking into work this morning a young man asked Babs if he could help her carry her heavy load.  Since girlhood, Babs adored it when a boy offered to carry her books and/or aid this damsel in distress.  It didn't hurt that the young man was extremely handsome, despite being a "ginger." 

The young ginger had recently been accepted into an Osteopathic School of Medicine, which got Babs to reminiscing about growing up under the care of Osteopaths,"Dr. Hurt and Dr. Payne" (really).  This could go far in explaining her fear of doctors.

Which delivers us to the subject of this wordy post, i.e. the phenomenon of "nomen est omen," at which Charles Dickens was the unparalleled master.  Below see one example of Dickens genius at this particular art form...

Pecksniff, n. (and adj.)

Etymology:     the name of Mr Pecksniff, a hypocritical character in Charles Dickens's novel The Life and Adventures of Martin Chuzzlewit.

An unctuous hypocrite, a person who affects benevolence or pretends to have high moral principles; (also) a person who interferes officiously in the business of others.  "We had, perhaps, never known a Newman Noggs, nor a Pecksniff, nor a Micawber; but we had known persons of whom these figures were but the strictly logical consummation." 

**If you don't have adhd, and can sit still long enough to read, you may find the article below fascinating!!
How names influence our destinies
We don't choose the names we carry, but they have an immense and often hidden effect on our lives
Published in "The Week"  March 9, 2012, at 10:33 AM
Do names matter?
To a remarkable degree, they do. Though we don't choose them, our names are badges bearing information about our class, education level, and ethnic origin — or at least those of our parents. Scientific studies have shown that the world makes different assumptions about a boy named Tyrone than it does about one named Philip, and while those assumptions are often wrong, they can have a considerable influence on the course of a life. A name can even exert unconscious influence over a person's own choices. Some scientific researchers contend that there are disproportionately large numbers of dentists named Dennis and lawyers named Lauren, and that it's not purely an accident that Dr. Douglas Hart of Scarsdale, N.Y., chose cardiology or that the Greathouse family of West Virginia runs a real-estate firm. To some degree, this has always been true: The Romans had the expression nomen est omen, or "name is destiny."
Has the way we name kids changed?
In this country it has. Most families used to give boys names chosen from a repertoire established within a family over generations, and while that was less true for girls, there was a relatively finite range of acceptable names, largely limited to those of saints. But in recent decades, the number of names in circulation has exploded. In 1912, when the most popular names in America were John and Mary, parents of 80 percent of American babies chose from among the 200 most common names. Today less than half of girls and about 60 percent of boys are accorded a top-200 name. One study found that 30 percent of African-American girls born in California during the 1990s were given names they shared with no one else born in the state in the same year.
What influences those choices?
The simple answer is taste, but taste is a complex thing. Names come into and fall out of fashion much as clothing styles, musical genres, and haircuts do. None of the top five girls' names from 1912 — Mary, Helen, Dorothy, Margaret, and Ruth — ranked in the top 40 in 2010, when the leaders were Emma, Olivia, Sophia, Isabella, and Ava. The name Wendy surged after the release of the movie and musical Peter Pan in the early 1950s, and Brittany took off in the 1990s with the career of pop star Britney Spears. The popularity of the names Isabella, Jacob, and Cullen in recent years has been linked to characters with those names in Stephenie Meyer's Twilight series of vampire novels.
Is it good to have a popular name?
In situations where the name is all that is known, people with common first names fare better than those with unique ones. Studies have found that a résumé submitted under a name perceived as African-American, such as Lakesia Washington, gets less attention from potential employers than the identical résumé bearing a more "Caucasian" name, like Mary Ann Roberts. A recent Australian study found that people tend to have better impressions of co-workers and political candidates whose names they can pronounce easily. Nonetheless, in this era of individual self-expression, many parents view commonplace names like Thomas or Jane as boring and uncreative. "For some parents, picking out a baby name is like curating the perfect bookshelf or outfit," said writer Nina Shen Rastogi in Slate.com. "It should telegraph refinement without snobbishness, exclusivity without gaucheness, uniqueness without déclassé wackiness." That's a fine line to walk: Aiden, one of the most popular boy's names in the U.S. over the last seven years, has now lost the exclusivity that made it attractive to many parents.
How do we react to our own names?

So are our names our destiny?
They undoubtedly have influence, but "destiny" is too strong a word. "Names only have a significant influence when that is the only thing you know about the person," says psychologist Dr. Martin Ford of George Mason University. "Add a picture, and the impact of the name recedes. Add information about personality, motivation, and ability, and the impact of the name shrinks to minimal significance." Condoleezza Rice's name might have held her back, but she was so smart, talented, and driven that she became secretary of state. On the other hand, there are people like Sue Yoo of Los Angeles, who grew up with people telling her, "Oh my god, that's your name, you should totally become a lawyer." Today she's an attorney. "Psychologically," she says, her name probably "helped me decide to go in that direction."
Names of the West
Where you live has a big impact on what names you prefer for your children. In the American West, University of Michigan researcher Michael Varnum has found, parents are more likely to give their children unconventional names than residents of the Eastern seaboard are. He says that reflects the persistence of the pioneer preference for "individualistic values such as uniqueness and self-reliance." You'd think that biblical names would be more popular in conservative regions, but the reverse is true. Naming expert Laura Wattenberg says that "classic, Christian, masculine" names like Peter and Thomas are more popular in blue states, while "an androgynous pagan newcomer like Dakota" is more likely to show up in a red state. Alaska's Sarah Palin, that Western avatar of traditional values, is a perfect example of that paradox: She named her children Track, Bristol, Willow, Piper, and Trig.

16 comments:

  1. Very interesting blog item! Also, it caught my eye because I am a PG Wodehouse fan and have read A Damsel in Distress. One of his earliest books. Extra points for those who know what the initials, PG, stand for.

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  2. Haven't a clue. I always thought PG Wodehouse was a lady.

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  3. He's a terrific writer, Babs. Very funny. A lot of his stuff has been recorded at LibriVox.org

    I always hated my name when I was a kid but finally just sort of 'grew' into it and accepted it.

    Dickens and Trollope came up with some of the best names I've ever come across for their characters. :)

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  4. The book jacket reminds me of Betty Draper.

    You are right Trollope, and Thackery, i.e. Becky Sharp, are great at character monikers.

    Indeed, we have very 50's names, but I've never met an L or a LA I didn't like.

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  5. PG is the creator of the Jeeves and Bertie Wooster characters--he's very funny. PG stands for Pelham Grenville, poor guy. His friends called him Plum, as that's how his name kind of sounds when you say it together the British way.

    I never liked my name, either, but I eventually figured that it could be worse--it could be Bertha or Hepzebah. It's not that I disliked it exactly--it's just so boring. And at the time, very popular, for some reason.

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  6. Kay, you might like some of the LibriVox recordings of Wodehouse's work. I think they've been read mostly by UK narrators.

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  7. I'll bet I would like it!

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  8. During the couurse of following my daughters' various athletic events, I became acquainted with a kid named Holly Wood. No kidding. 'Nuff said.

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  9. My freshman English teacher's name was Harry Krak. One up me blogosphere...

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    1. The blogosphere anonymously calls your bet and raises you one Harry Colon: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Harry_Colon

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  10. Speaking of unfortunate names, please note the name of the "Guest Home" where Madge picks up her granny. Small touches make this video by Guy Ritchie one of my favorites.

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qYwgG2oyUbA

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  11. We have a urologist here who has the last name of Cockburn. However, it's pronounced like 'Coburn' and he gets really 'pissed' when people get it wrong. After all these years, you'd think he would have developed a sense of humor about it.

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    1. Stay off the rug, good doctor.

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  12. Oh that's too funny...a Cockburn by any other other name...

    "Dr. Cockburn please see gate representative for your upgrade." All eyes to peeled to see the man named with the unfortunate name of Cockburn.

    Bitter wife: "Is this Dr. Cockburn's office? I'm calling to make an appointment for my husband's vasectomy."

    It may have increased his trade over the years..."namen est omen."

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  13. Pg slot แตกง่าย เกมแจ็คพอต PG SLOT เป็นอีกหนึ่งต้นแบบเกมทำเงินยอดนิยมเยอะที่สุดในปี 2021 นี้ มีเรื่องราวชักชวนติดตาม และก็มีภาพกราฟิกที่ชัดเจนงดงามสูงที่สุดอีกด้วยเล่นเลย

    ReplyDelete