vanillafluffy: (writer hath spoken)
[personal profile] vanillafluffy
Wandering thru Slate after reading this week's "Dear Prudence" column, I ran across "Where Baby Names Come From" (http://www.slate.com/id/2116505/), an interesting article that proposes that parents from the lower end of the socio-economic scale "borrow" baby names given to more upwardly mobile infants in hopes of bestowing similar success on them.

I gave that some thought; remembered my answering service career, where a very busy pediatric practice exposed me to the local trends in child-naming fashion, circa 1988-92. Of course, I have no way of knowing which callers were high or low income---what stuck me was how often I could tell mama's soap opera preferences by how she'd christened her offspring. (Lots of Krystals, Alexises, Kaylas....) Although, thinking of it in that light, that's also use of a more affluent name---Dynasty was 80s excess at its best.

A character's name can certainly evoke feelings for a reader---as well as potential trouble for a writer: I will never again succumb to the impulse that made me name a trio of brothers Eduardo, Ernesto and Esteban. *shudder* Never mind that I once knew sisters Dawn, Doris, Debbie and Denise. Keeping those guys sorted out was a nightmare.

A wise reader will see a name like "Gabrielle Angelica Ravenscroft" and KNOW that she's a Sue. Want to disguise a Sue? Call her Jane, or Martha or something else that doesn't sound like it's wearing a lacy dress on its way to a tea party. Or, if you're going to write fic in which your protagonists spawn, consider the fandom---do you honestly think Greg House and James Wilson are going to name their adorable little assbaby "Buttercup"? If so, you really need to stop smoking that shit. Your brain is melting. Srsly.

My fics tend not to introduce a lot of OCs. Reviewing the list, canon trumps new characters by about 10 to 1. In several stories, I didn't name the original characters at all; introductions can be less important than action. Sometimes that adds mystery; other times, a nickname can convey more than an "official" name.

I used the nickname "Lisiado" (which means broken) for a lame character who is a man with a past...under another name. Since it's from the canon of Robert Rodriguez, who's been known to give his characters names that translate to things like "Snot" and "Blue", "Broken" fits right in. But is he really broken?

For an enigmatic and deadly former CIA agent, I simply used initials: RC. Deceptively innocuous, it doesn't even give away the character's gender. (One of these days, someone may catch on to that....)

Skyflower is a magikal practitioner. Sounds all kinds of New Age hippy-dippy, doesn't it? That's what the hero expects, anyway.

Richard Arlington Terwilliger is a former professor of anthopology, who's living on the streets and suffers from mental problems. (The initials are not coincidental.) Someone was running a check on his background, which is why his full name came up, but that isn't revealed until after he's been shown as a derelict.

With a name like Nadine Cooper, you know this is a woman with roots in the deep South. 'Nadine' is far more likely to be found in Georgia or Alabama than New Jersey, and the possibility of her using a cast-iron skillet as a murder weapon fits right in.

"Marlena Wentwell" hints of the silver screen and fading glory. No surprise then that she's an aging actress whose glamour days are long gone.

And so on. Not a Gwynnyvyre Brigitta in the bunch. Now, if it's meant to be funny, by all means, lay it on thick. Giving names based on sweets to the wanna-be brides in "Lonesome Confectioner Seeks True Love" was intended to be tongue-in-cheek, as was creating a Mary Sue named Mary Sue for the sequel, "Mary Sue Sells Mary Kay". (Both at the Pit of Voles.)

If I had an actual child to name---and thank the deity of your choice that I don't---I suspect I might be tempted to come up with a Buttercup name of my own. I wouldn't give my kid a rubber stamp name. Nothing too common---Jennifer and Kim are both *out*, despite knowing lovely individuals with those names. Ditto a whole stack of trendy name that I detest (and if one of them applies to you, it's nothing personal. Blame your mama.): Tiffany, Brittany, Briana, Paige, Trisha---the list goes on.

While bestowing a fanciful, unique name sounds like fun, I grew up hating my own given name, so I'd rather find something that's not common, but not completely off the map. A family name, maybe: Gordon or Peter are both simple names that are clearly BOYS. Lillian was a favorite aunt, and it may be time to reclaim my mother's pretty name, Laverne, from sitcom hell.

Not that this is going to be an issue unless I'm about to give birth to a two-year old. Nope, I have menopause and no love life on my side.
.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-05 11:56 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] majolika.livejournal.com
I LOVE naming characters! And I do tend not to call them Bobby Brown. I was stuck with a hero name of Douglas Wellesley Fortescue over 450 pages once and oh, I started to hate this name with a vengeance!

Terwilliger is cool.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 02:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vanillafluffy.livejournal.com
Yeah, Doug is another Buttercup sort of name. The closest I've ever come to a "Bobby Brown" name was the time I reinvented a very minor character from a novel and changed her name from Katherine to Kate, which made her much easier to work with. Kate Martin, to be exact, which is about as bland as anything *can* be...and curiously, she turned out to be one of my deeper characters.

Terwilliger...I heard it somewhere and it stuck. It *sounds* eccentric. He showed up in two Riddick origin fics, and only got named in the second one. He's definitely one of my strangest original characters.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 01:56 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] socialhermit.livejournal.com
If I had an actual child to name---and thank the deity of your choice that I don't---I suspect I might be tempted to come up with a Buttercup name of my own. I wouldn't give my kid a rubber stamp name. AND While bestowing a fanciful, unique name sounds like fun, I grew up hating my own given name, so I'd rather find something that's not common, but not completely off the map.

*nods emphatically*

My parents didn't exactly give me a 'cookie cutter' moniker, and the spelling certainly wasn't common, yet I never felt comfortable with that name. I was named after my father (Terry) and they spelled mine "Tari", but the only other Terrys I knew growing up were boys. It just never seemed like the name fit me.

So I changed it to "Taryn" when I was 20. But you already knew that. ;-)

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 04:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vanillafluffy.livejournal.com
One of the girls I grew up with was named after her mother, and when she was about twelve, she decided she'd rather be Terri. Since I also had name issues, I was perfectly happy to go along with that.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 03:08 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] martian-aries.livejournal.com
do you honestly think Greg House and James Wilson are going to name their adorable little assbaby "Buttercup"?

Okay, I think that's the hardest I've laughed all day. I needed that. Thank you.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 03:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vanillafluffy.livejournal.com
So glad to know I've accomplished something today!

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 05:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] sorchar.livejournal.com
My pet peeve is brothers named Sean and Ian, of which there is a pair at my son's school. They're THE SAME DAMN NAME! It's like naming your daughters Mary, Maria and Marie. Which, if you're Catholic, might actually happen.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 06:05 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vanillafluffy.livejournal.com
They stopped with two? Are you sure there isn't a sister, Ivana, and her twin, Johanna? *smirk*

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 10:40 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] secondsilk.livejournal.com
My parents had a couple of theories on naming me and my brother. I would have been Charlie if I was a boy, because it goes with my last name, and my mother's grandfather was Charlie. But in the end both my brother and I have androgynous names (and our mother's surname, so my name read as male), and that was a deliberate decision. They told everyone they were going to call me Maud, so that no one could complain about what they were actually going to call me, and when they annouced mmy name, everyone could think 'well, at least it's better than Maud.'

When I was five I made my teacher call me by a particular nickname, rather than my full name. But that was weird, once it worked. When I six, there was another girl in my class with the same name, and for a term I insisted on being called Rosella (which is actually a bird, but I ignored that). But I like my name now, I always introduce myself with the whole thing, and I think that I've kind of grown into it.

On the Glass House on Wednesday they talked about names and naming. Adam Spencer, whose middle name turns out to be Barrington, worked with a woman whose name was Zoie and she always had to explain to be people how to spell it. He said that she end up spending 11 years of her life saying, 'z-o-i-e, no o-i-e, yes i-e.'

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 12:33 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vanillafluffy.livejournal.com
I like my mom's maiden name, and these days, wouldn't mind that a bit. I might not have cared for it as a name growing up with it, simply because the masses weren't using the surname method of naming for girls yet, and it would have been as much of an oddity as the name I was given.

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 10:41 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jadesfire2808.livejournal.com
The trouble with naming characters in fiction is that I've met too many poor unfortunate souls with naming issues in real life, so that strange names in stories don't bother me too much. My parents had the cunning plan of giving me a name that didn't abbreviate to anything else. The only problem was that it still had (still has, for that matter ;)) two syllables, and my friends just called me by the first one! So much for that plan.

Incidentally, I think if I come across any more solid, reliable, all-American heroes called Jack, I may be forced to throw something at the television. Someone somewhere had a list of them, running into twenty names, I seem to remember. Does anyone else think it's getting out of hand?

And don't even get me started on initials...

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 12:26 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] vanillafluffy.livejournal.com
I must be watching the wrong stuff, cuzz I can't think of anywhere near that many. (And no one in their right mind is gonna call Jack Sparrow reliable OR American.) Jack Ryan, yes to both, Jack Bauer, ditto...uh, after that, it gets fuzzy....

(no subject)

Date: 2006-10-06 01:17 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jadesfire2808.livejournal.com
Jack O'Neill (Stargate), Jack Malone (Without a Trace), plus your two, um, ok, that's all I can think of, but I've got the excuse of being on the wrong side of the Atlantic. I'll try and hunt out the list - it was quite impressive. It just seems to be the default name of choice for the 'everyman' at the centre of dramas. I've nothing against it (it was my grandfather's name) but I can't tell you how happy I was that it wasn't the name of anyone on House!

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