Naming Assumptions
By Rosalie Arcala Hall September 8, 2010 10:00 pmFor women in the academy, one’s name is akin to a passport which under no circumstance must you tamper with. Your reputation as a scholar is attached to your name, which when subjected to a Google search, may yield only a few or a substantial number of hits depending on if it is correctly remembered or spelled. Unlike men, marriage pressures women to decide whether or not to make this changed civil status a separate “name reality” from their professional one. It is a tough choice to make.
Within my age and professional cohorts, I am a statistical outlier. First, I wanted a name that reflects a connection to my husband, a fact that some of my more liberal colleagues find counterintuitive. I also wanted my maiden surname spelled out to honor my local roots. Upon
Yesterday’s Gems, Today’s Insights A Roundup of the Web’s Finest Blog
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*Yesterday’s Gems, Today’s Insights*
*A Roundup of the Web’s Finest Blog Posts!**7-12-25*
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