The Influence of Names on Identity and Success

 
“What’s in a name? That which we call a rose by any
other name would smell as sweet.”
William Shakespeare
 
http://www.freakonomics.com/2013/04/08/how-much-does-your-name-matter-full-transcript/
 
“Baby names while at first glance may seem like a
relatively frivolous kind of concept, they’re incredibly
powerful indicators of status, of aspiration, of taste and
identity.”
 
In their book 
Freakonomics
, researchers  Steven D.
Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner make the claim that your
name does not affect your destiny.  In April 2013, they
participated in a podcast to revisit the idea of naming in
“How Much Does Your Name Matter?”
 
Information from:  We Believe People With Easy-to-Pronounce Names, Says Science
By 
Lilit Marcus, Shine Contributor
 | 
Parenting
 – Fri, May 2, 2014 1:01 PM EDT
https://shine.yahoo.com/parenting/we-believe-people-with-easy-to-pronounce-names--says-science-170147896.html
 
Key Points of studies done about names
“The results from these experiments showed that people with
easier to pronounce names were judged as more familiar, less
risky and less dangerous than individuals with difficult to
pronounce names.”
Immigrants who "Americanized" their names were more likely to
get jobs than ones who opted not to. They also ended up making
more money.
Female attorneys in South Carolina were more likely to win
judgeships if they had a gender-neutral or ambiguous name like
Terry or Kelly than if they had a more traditionally feminine ones
like Susan or Laurie.
 
***Want to see how your name has trended over time?  Visit:
http://zatonovo.com/dataviz/baby_names
 
 
The first episode of Bravo's newest reality
show, 
Pregnant in Heels
, served up a first look at
what happens when the uber rich get pregnant ...
and turn to pregnancy concierge 
Rosie Pope
 to
help them prep. Enter branding expert Samantha
Ettus and husband Mitch Jacobs, founder and
CEO of a business capital firm. They want
to brand their baby.
 
The couple named their little boy….
 
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/09/blue-ivy-carter-beyonce-baby_n_1194855.html
 
Naming expert Linda Rosenkrankrantz:  There was a jazz singer Ivy
(aka Ivie) Anderson who sang with Duke Ellington. Do Beyonce and
Jay-Z know her?  "Uncertain. But when I heard the name Blue I did
think of Billie Holiday and Lady Sings the Blues," said Satran.
 
Satran:  "Blue is one of the new color names that's been most
enthusiastically embraced by celebrities, sometimes spelled the French
way, Bleu, which might have been expected for Beyonce whose own
name along with sister Solange's has French origins."
 
Good Morning America:  Ivy is a play on the Roman
numeral IV. The number four is significant to the
power couple -- they married on April 4th, (4/4),
both of their birthdays are on the 4th (September
and December), and Beyonce's fourth studio album
was called "4."
 
Naming expert Pamela Satran: "Ivy, a symbol of
fertility, is an old-fashioned name enjoying a
resurgence…It's just cracked the Top 300 for the
first time since the 1890s, making it a stylish
steampunk choice."
 
Kardashian gave birth to a healthy baby girl on
Saturday, June 15, 2013… Name expert and author
Laura Wattenberg said, "Direction names are uncommon in general,
and almost always male. North is the second most common direction
name for boys, after West. North doesn't have a traditionally name-
like sound for either girls or boys, but parents have generally placed
directions on the boys' side, just as seasons (Summer, Autumn, even
Winter) have gone to the girls."
 
Well, if you combine Kim 
No
el Kardashian and Kanye Oma
ri
 West's
middle names, you get "Nori.“  (PORTMANTEAU!!!)
 
http://omg.yahoo.com/blogs/celeb-news/story-behind-kim-kardashian-baby-name-did-notice-171036472.html
 
The third in line to the throne is believed to be named for his great-
great-grandfather George VI, father of Queen Elizabeth II. Louis is
possibly derived from Prince Philip's uncle, Lord Louis Mountbatten,
with whom Prince Charles had a close relationship and
the last British Viceroy of India before independence
in 1947.
 
Alexander could be a reference to old Kings of Scotland
and it's also the male version of Alexandra, the queen's
middle name...
 
http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/entertainment/2013/06/how-to-name-a-royal-heir/
  AND
http://www.eonline.com/news/442246/prince-george-alexander-louis-of-cambridge-is-a-very-appropriate-and-
significant-name-says-royal-biographer
 
“Royals tend to choose dynastic names,
names with history and tradition … it has
to be something of weight and gravitas,”
[royal expert Victoria] Arbiter says.
 
GEORGE LOUIS ALEXANDER
 
Note the devices of comparison (simile/metaphor) in
Cisneros’ first paragraph as well as in Dumas’ third
paragraph.  To what effect are they employed?
Compare/contrast the authors’ tone towards their own
names.  How is the tone developed? Select specific textual
support.
Consider the idea of re-naming (and hence identity)
     both women explore.
 
Read the Sandra Cisneros piece “My Name” excerpted from her book
The House on Mango Street
, a collection of intertwined stories about
a young Mexican-American girl who, much like Cisneros, grew up in a
poor, working-class area of Chicago. Also, read Firoozeh Dumas’  “The
‘F-Word’” excerpted from her nonfiction memoir 
Funny in Farsi
; born
in Iran, later moving to America, she writes about her cultural
heritage and assimilation into American society.
 
Sandra Cisneros-”My Name” excerpted from 
The House on Mango Street
 
In English my name means hope.  In Spanish it means too many letters.  It means
sadness, it means waiting.  It is like the number nine. A muddy color.  It is the Mexican records
my father plays on Sunday mornings when he is shaving, songs like sobbing.
 
It was my great-grandmother’s name and now it is mine.  She was a horsewoman too,
born like me in the Chinese year of the horse- which is supposed to be bad luck if you’re born
female- but I think this is a Chinese lie because the Chinese, like the Mexicans don’t like their
women strong.
 
My great-grandmother. I would’ve liked to have known her, a wild horse of a woman,
so wild she wouldn’t marry.  Until my great-grandfather threw a sack over her head and carried
her off. Just like that. As if she were a fancy chandelier. That’s the way he did it.
 
And the story goes she never forgave him.  She looked out the window her whole life,
the way so many women sit their sadness on an elbow.  I wonder if she made the best with
what she got or was she sorry because she couldn’t be all the things she wanted to be.
Esperanza. I have inherited her name, but I don’t want to inherit her place by the window.  At
school they say my name funny as if the syllables were made out of tin and hurt the roof of
your mouth.  But in Spanish, my name is made out of something softer something like silver,
not quite as thick as sister’s name—Magdalena—which is uglier than mine. Magdalena who
can at least come home and become Nenny. But I am always Esperanza.
 
I would like to baptize myself under a new name, a name more like the real me, the
one nobody sees. Esperanza as Lasiandra or Martiza or ZeZe the X. Yes. Something like ZeZe the
X will do.
 
“The ‘F Word’” excerpted from 
Funny in Farsi
 by Firoozeh Dumas (2004)
 
 
My cousin’s name, Farbod, means “Greatness.”  When he moved to America, all the
kids called him “Farthead.”  My brother Farshid (“He Who Enlightens”) became “Fartshit.”
The name of my friend Neggar means “Beloved,” although it can be more accurately translated
as “She Whose Name Almost Incites Riots.” Her brother Arash (“Giver”) initially couldn’t
understand why every time he’d say his name, people would laugh and ask him if it itched.
 
All of us immigrants knew that moving to America would be fraught with challenges,
but none of us thought that our names would be such an obstacle.  How could our parents have
ever imagined that someday we would end up in a country where monosyllabic names reign
supreme, a land where “William” is shortened to “Bill,” where “Susan” becomes “Sue,” and
“Richard” somehow evolves into “Dick”?  America is a great country, but nobody without a
mask and a cape has a 
z
 in his name.  And have Americans ever realized the great scope of the
guttural sounds they’re missing?  Okay, so it has to do with linguistic roots, but I do believe
this would be a richer country if all Americans could do a little tongue aerobics and learn to
pronounce “kh,” a sound more commonly associated in this culture with phlegm, or “gh,” the
sound usually made by actors in the final moments of a choking scene.  It’s like adding a few
spices to the kitchen pantry.  Move over, cinnamon and nutmeg, make way for cardamom and
sumac.
 
Exotic analogies aside, having a foreign name in this land of Joes and Marys is a pain
in the spice cabinet.  When I was twelve, I decided to simplify my life by adding an American
middle name.  This decision serves as proof that sometimes simplifying one’s life in the short
run only complicates it in the long run.
 
My name, Firoozeh, chosen by my mother, means “Turquoise” in Farsi.  In America, it
means “Unpronounceable” or “I’m Not Going to Talk to You Because I Cannot Possibly Learn
Your Name and I Just Don’t Want to Have to Ask You Again and Again Because You’ll Think
I’m Dumb or You Might Get Upset or Something.”  My father, incidentally, had wanted to name
me Sara.  I do wish he had won that argument.
 
1.
Look up the origin of your name.
 
2. Ask someone close to you about why your name
was chosen just for you.
 
3.  Check the trending site:
(
http://zatonovo.com/dataviz/baby_names
)
 
3. Imitating Cisneros’ or Dumas’ opening style (see
next slides for models), construct a piece about
your name (about ¾ of a page to one page,
paragraphed as you see fit).
 
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The impact of names on individuals' lives is explored through studies and examples. Researchers argue that names do not determine destiny, yet names play a crucial role in perceptions and outcomes. Easy-to-pronounce names are associated with positive judgements, while unconventional names can influence job prospects and earnings. Naming decisions, like branding babies or choosing unique names, showcase the significance attached to names. This analysis delves into the complexities of how names shape identity and success.

  • Names
  • Identity
  • Success
  • Perception
  • Influence

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  1. The Rhetoric of Naming What s in a name? That which we call a rose by any What s in a name? That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet. other name would smell as sweet. William Shakespeare Connotation Denotation

  2. In their book Freakonomics, researchers Steven D. Levitt and Stephen J. Dubner make the claim that your name does not affect your destiny. In April 2013, they participated in a podcast to revisit the idea of naming in How Much Does Your Name Matter? Baby names while at first glance may seem like a relatively frivolous kind of concept, they re incredibly powerful indicators of status, of aspiration, of taste and identity. http://www.freakonomics.com/2013/04/08/how-much-does-your-name-matter-full-transcript/

  3. Information from: We Believe People With Easy-to-Pronounce Names, Says Science By Lilit Marcus, Shine Contributor | Parenting Fri, May 2, 2014 1:01 PM EDT https://shine.yahoo.com/parenting/we-believe-people-with-easy-to-pronounce-names--says-science-170147896.html Key Points of studies done about names The results from these experiments showed that people with easier to pronounce names were judged as more familiar, less risky and less dangerous than individuals with difficult to pronounce names. Immigrants who "Americanized" their names were more likely to get jobs than ones who opted not to. They also ended up making more money. Female attorneys in South Carolina were more likely to win judgeships if they had a gender-neutral or ambiguous name like Terry or Kelly than if they had a more traditionally feminine ones like Susan or Laurie. ***Want to see how your name has trended over time? Visit: http://zatonovo.com/dataviz/baby_names

  4. http://clumsymummy.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/pregnant-in-heels.jpghttp://clumsymummy.files.wordpress.com/2012/01/pregnant-in-heels.jpg CLICK The first episode of Bravo's newest reality show, Pregnant in Heels, served up a first look at what happens when the uber rich get pregnant ... and turn to pregnancy concierge Rosie Pope to help them prep. Enter branding expert Samantha Ettus and husband Mitch Jacobs, founder and CEO of a business capital firm. They want to brand their baby.

  5. The couple named their little boy. Bowen Asher Jacobs

  6. Blue Ivy Good Morning America: Ivy is a play on the Roman numeral IV. The number four is significant to the power couple -- they married on April 4th, (4/4), both of their birthdays are on the 4th (September and December), and Beyonce's fourth studio album was called "4." Naming expert Pamela Satran: "Ivy, a symbol of fertility, is an old-fashioned name enjoying a resurgence It's just cracked the Top 300 for the first time since the 1890s, making it a stylish steampunk choice." Naming expert Linda Rosenkrankrantz: There was a jazz singer Ivy (aka Ivie) Anderson who sang with Duke Ellington. Do Beyonce and Jay-Z know her? "Uncertain. But when I heard the name Blue I did think of Billie Holiday and Lady Sings the Blues," said Satran. Satran: "Blue is one of the new color names that's been most enthusiastically embraced by celebrities, sometimes spelled the French way, Bleu, which might have been expected for Beyonce whose own name along with sister Solange's has French origins." http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/01/09/blue-ivy-carter-beyonce-baby_n_1194855.html

  7. North West Kardashian gave birth to a healthy baby girl on Saturday, June 15, 2013 Name expert and author Laura Wattenberg said, "Direction names are uncommon in general, and almost always male. North is the second most common direction name for boys, after West. North doesn't have a traditionally name- like sound for either girls or boys, but parents have generally placed directions on the boys' side, just as seasons (Summer, Autumn, even Winter) have gone to the girls." Well, if you combine Kim Noel Kardashian and Kanye Omari West's middle names, you get "Nori. (PORTMANTEAU!!!) http://omg.yahoo.com/blogs/celeb-news/story-behind-kim-kardashian-baby-name-did-notice-171036472.html

  8. GEORGE LOUIS ALEXANDER Royals tend to choose dynastic names, names with history and tradition it has to be something of weight and gravitas, [royal expert Victoria] Arbiter says. The third in line to the throne is believed to be named for his great- great-grandfather George VI, father of Queen Elizabeth II. Louis is possibly derived from Prince Philip's uncle, Lord Louis Mountbatten, with whom Prince Charles had a close relationship and the last British Viceroy of India before independence in 1947. Alexander could be a reference to old Kings of Scotland and it's also the male version of Alexandra, the queen's middle name... http://abcnews.go.com/blogs/entertainment/2013/06/how-to-name-a-royal-heir/ AND http://www.eonline.com/news/442246/prince-george-alexander-louis-of-cambridge-is-a-very-appropriate-and- significant-name-says-royal-biographer

  9. Read the Sandra Cisneros piece My Name excerpted from her book The House on Mango Street, a collection of intertwined stories about a young Mexican-American girl who, much like Cisneros, grew up in a poor, working-class area of Chicago. Also, read Firoozeh Dumas The F-Word excerpted from her nonfiction memoir Funny in Farsi; born in Iran, later moving to America, she writes about her cultural heritage and assimilation into American society. Note the devices of comparison (simile/metaphor) in Cisneros first paragraph as well as in Dumas third paragraph. To what effect are they employed? Compare/contrast the authors tone towards their own names. How is the tone developed? Select specific textual support. Consider the idea of re-naming (and hence identity) both women explore.

  10. Sandra Cisneros-My Name excerpted from The House on Mango Street In English my name means hope. In Spanish it means too many letters. It means sadness, it means waiting. It is like the number nine. A muddy color. It is the Mexican records my father plays on Sunday mornings when he is shaving, songs like sobbing. It was my great-grandmother s name and now it is mine. She was a horsewoman too, born like me in the Chinese year of the horse- which is supposed to be bad luck if you re born female- but I think this is a Chinese lie because the Chinese, like the Mexicans don t like their women strong. My great-grandmother. I would ve liked to have known her, a wild horse of a woman, so wild she wouldn t marry. Until my great-grandfather threw a sack over her head and carried her off. Just like that. As if she were a fancy chandelier. That s the way he did it. And the story goes she never forgave him. She looked out the window her whole life, the way so many women sit their sadness on an elbow. I wonder if she made the best with what she got or was she sorry because she couldn t be all the things she wanted to be. Esperanza. I have inherited her name, but I don t want to inherit her place by the window. At school they say my name funny as if the syllables were made out of tin and hurt the roof of your mouth. But in Spanish, my name is made out of something softer something like silver, not quite as thick as sister s name Magdalena which is uglier than mine. Magdalena who can at least come home and become Nenny. But I am always Esperanza. I would like to baptize myself under a new name, a name more like the real me, the one nobody sees. Esperanza as Lasiandra or Martiza or ZeZe the X. Yes. Something like ZeZe the X will do.

  11. The F Word excerpted from Funny in Farsi by Firoozeh Dumas (2004) My cousin s name, Farbod, means Greatness. When he moved to America, all the kids called him Farthead. My brother Farshid ( He Who Enlightens ) became Fartshit. The name of my friend Neggar means Beloved, although it can be more accurately translated as She Whose Name Almost Incites Riots. Her brother Arash ( Giver ) initially couldn t understand why every time he d say his name, people would laugh and ask him if it itched. All of us immigrants knew that moving to America would be fraught with challenges, but none of us thought that our names would be such an obstacle. How could our parents have ever imagined that someday we would end up in a country where monosyllabic names reign supreme, a land where William is shortened to Bill, where Susan becomes Sue, and Richard somehow evolves into Dick ? America is a great country, but nobody without a mask and a cape has a z in his name. And have Americans ever realized the great scope of the guttural sounds they re missing? Okay, so it has to do with linguistic roots, but I do believe this would be a richer country if all Americans could do a little tongue aerobics and learn to pronounce kh, a sound more commonly associated in this culture with phlegm, or gh, the sound usually made by actors in the final moments of a choking scene. It s like adding a few spices to the kitchen pantry. Move over, cinnamon and nutmeg, make way for cardamom and sumac. Exotic analogies aside, having a foreign name in this land of Joes and Marys is a pain in the spice cabinet. When I was twelve, I decided to simplify my life by adding an American middle name. This decision serves as proof that sometimes simplifying one s life in the short run only complicates it in the long run. My name, Firoozeh, chosen by my mother, means Turquoise in Farsi. In America, it means Unpronounceable or I m Not Going to Talk to You Because I Cannot Possibly Learn Your Name and I Just Don t Want to Have to Ask You Again and Again Because You ll Think I m Dumb or You Might Get Upset or Something. My father, incidentally, had wanted to name me Sara. I do wish he had won that argument.

  12. 1.Look up the origin of your name. 2. Ask someone close to you about why your name was chosen just for you. 3. Check the trending site: (http://zatonovo.com/dataviz/baby_names) 3. Imitating Cisneros or Dumas opening style (see next slides for models), construct a piece about your name (about of a page to one page, paragraphed as you see fit).

  13. STRUCTURE Grabber: What does the name mean? (denotation, hint at connotation) Simile: The name is like YOUR NAME Colleen means girl in Gaelic. Born on the 6th day of the 6th month, Colleen, with a double l and double e, means multiplicity. It is like two sides of a coin. Metaphor: The name is It is the moon, at once both halved and full. What do you want to share about your name? It s history? It s connotation? Your tone toward it? Keep going!

  14. STRUCTURE Grabber: Family naming patterns (denotation, hint at connotation) YOUR NAME My dad is named Raymond and so is my brother. To avoid confusion whenever my mom called for one of them, my brother was rebranded as Ray-Ray. Noreen, my mother, chose the name Colleen for me. Our family of doubles and rhymes is a menagerie of poetic devices run amok. OR My mother is named Patricia but is called by her middle name of Noreen. Her brother Martin answers to his middle, John. Baby of the family Timarie is officially named Ann. So why, in a family of backwards Irish names am I called chronologically Colleen? What do you want to share about your name? It s history? It s connotation? Your tone toward it? Keep going!

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