Whats in a let on? That which we call a rose
By whatever other word would smell as sweet.
So Romeo would, were he not Romeo called,
Retain that dear perfection which he owes
Without that title. Romeo, doff thy name,
And, for thy name, which is no social occasion of thee,
Take all myself.
hakespeare, Romeo and Juliet, II.ii
Shakespeares Juliet tells us that names are unimportant - inconsequential, in fact. A name is merely a convenient absorb of sounds that denotes an individual, but it has no meaning. But this is clearly not true. Would Romeo and Juliet be the same play if its star-crossed lovers were called Robert and Jennifer? Of course not. The names of characters serve to account them as members of a certain culture and help to cementum their identities. A name may be an arbitrary draw off of sounds, but it carries much more weight than that. In Beloved, Toni Morrison demonstrates a clear understanding of this fact. Her choices of character names assist in firmly establishing the world of the book.
Toni Morrison was born with the name Chloe Anthony Wofford. She changed her first name to Toni upon entering college - traditionally, a time looked upon as one of slap-up significance in a young persons life.![]()
From this, we can read that Morrison appreciates the power of a changed name to confer a vernal identity. There are two characters whose names change during the superior: Jenny Whitlow becomes Baby Suggs, and Joshua becomes Stamp Paid. In some(prenominal) of these cases, the character is abandoning the name under which they lived as a hard worker for a new, free name. Whitlow is the last name of Jennys original master (142), and we learn that she takes the name Baby Suggs because her husband called her Baby.
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