名字里有什么?

IF 0.1 4区 哲学 Q4 BIODIVERSITY CONSERVATION Natural History Pub Date : 1999-01-01 DOI:10.5040/9781474214766.ch-001
Ellen Goldensohn
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I think of this story now, as I turn to my then-boyfriend, now husband, and say, “Maybe I’ll change my name. Take yours instead.” “If you want,” he says. Blessedly, he doesn’t mention that I’ve brought it up enough times over the course of our five-year marriage to become something of a joke. “I would love it, but really, it’s up to you.” At the time of our wedding, the time you’d think I would have answered this question once and for all, I never seriously considered taking his name. It wasn’t who I was. I liked my name, liked that it was different from his. A name struck me as the most incidental of connections. Why would we ever need to share one? And now — well, now things have changed. Now there are three of us. We have a daughter — a wondrous little girl — who at 17 months is just now saying her first name. I suspect she will not care much that her last name differs from her mother’s. I’m the one who feels a twinge when we receive invitations addressed to the three of us or see our names listed in our building’s directory — the awkwardness of having my husband’s and daughter’s names linked while mine remains alone. The myriad solutions that others have alighted on never felt right. Would you hyphenate Umansky? And yet I just can’t seem to take the plunge. Change the name I’ve always had, that long clunky name that somehow made it through Ellis Island and fought off the assimilating forces that followed? Change the name that links me not only to my brothers and paternal family but to the little town of Uman in Ukraine, where at the start of the Jewish New Year, thousands flock to the gravesite of Rabbi Nachman and chant, Uman, Uman, Rosh Hashanah? I decided long ago that I would retain my name professionally, so in many ways, changing it feels slightly ridiculous, a grand, hollow gesture. Perhaps it comes down to this: Five years ago, I worried about preserving my own identity. Now it feels equally important to carve out a collective identity for the three of us, my family. The last time I brought it up, my husband, daughter and I were walking on a nearly empty beach, on a glorious fall day. It was blissful, and I found myself thinking, with a nervous jab of excitement, Would this be the time I truly decided? I took my husband’s hand. “You’d change it legally?” he asked. I nodded. He smiled, and then his face clouded over. “What?” I asked. “Nothing,” he said. “It’s just — it’ll be a lot of paperwork.” I looked at him, and I felt just the tiniest bit relieved. 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引用次数: 0

摘要

几年前,当我第一次搬到纽约时,我的名字被改了。我正在为我的新公寓设置电话服务,电话那头的女人问了我一连串的问题:呼叫等待?呼叫转移吗?你想怎样上市?我的回答是:有,没有,还有我的首字母。一周后,我的邮箱里收到了威瑞森发来的一个厚厚的数据包。信的收信人是“E”,没有名字,也没有姓氏——只有一个字母孤零零地放在我的街名和电话号码上面。有好几年,直到我搬去和男朋友同居,“E”这个名字一直留在我的电话卡上、电话簿上,以及所有Verizon通讯上。我喜欢它本身的样子。我的“E”感觉充满了可能性,就像涂上一抹亮色的口红,就像穿上一件紧身连衣裙。也许这标志着一个全新的我。我现在想起这个故事,对我当时的男朋友,现在的丈夫说:“也许我会改个名字。用你的吧。“如果你愿意,”他说。幸运的是,他没有提到,在我们五年的婚姻生活中,我已经多次提起这件事,以至于成了一个笑话。“我很乐意,但说真的,这取决于你。”在我们举行婚礼的时候,你可能会认为我会一劳永逸地回答这个问题,但我从来没有认真考虑过要用他的名字。那不是真正的我。我喜欢我的名字,喜欢它和他的不一样。一个名字给我的印象是最偶然的联系。我们为什么要共用一个?而现在——嗯,现在一切都变了。现在我们有三个人了。我们有一个女儿,一个奇妙的小女孩,17个月大的她刚刚说出她的名字。我猜她不会太在意她的姓和她母亲的不一样。当我们收到寄给我们三个人的邀请,或者看到我们的名字被列在我们楼的通讯录上时,我感到一阵刺痛——我丈夫和女儿的名字连在一起,而我的名字却独自一人,这是一种尴尬。其他人选择的无数解决方案从来都感觉不对。你能把乌曼斯基连字符吗?然而,我似乎就是不敢冒险。改一个我一直用的名字,那个又长又笨的名字,不知怎么熬过了埃利斯岛,击退了随之而来的同化势力?改变我的名字,它不仅把我和我的兄弟和父亲的家庭联系在一起,而且把我和乌克兰的乌曼小镇联系在一起。在那里,犹太新年开始时,成千上万的人涌向拉比纳赫曼的墓地,高呼:乌曼,乌曼,新年快乐!很久以前,我就决定在工作中保留自己的名字,所以在很多方面,改变名字让我觉得有点可笑,是一种宏大而空洞的姿态。也许可以归结为:五年前,我担心如何保持自己的身份。现在,为我们三个人,也就是我的家庭,创造一个集体身份,也同样重要。我最后一次提起这件事,是在一个阳光明媚的秋日,我和丈夫、女儿走在几乎空旷的海滩上。这是幸福的,我发现自己在想,带着紧张兴奋的刺痛,这是我真正做出决定的时候吗?我握住丈夫的手。“你想合法地改变它?”他问。我点了点头。他笑了,然后他的脸变得阴沉起来。“什么?”我问。“没什么,”他说。“只是——会有很多文书工作要做。”我看着他,感到一丝宽慰。就目前而言,这个理由足以让事情保持原样。■
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What's in the Name?.
Years ago, when I first moved to New York, my name got changed. I was setting up phone service for my new apartment, and the woman on the other end ran through a series of questions: Call waiting? Call forwarding? How do you want to be listed? My answers: Yes, no, and by my first initial. A week later, a thick packet from Verizon landed in my mailbox. It was addressed to “E,” no first name, no last — only that letter sitting alone above my street name and number. For several years, until I moved in with my boyfriend, “E” I remained — on my calling card, in the phone book, on all Verizon correspondence. I liked the way it looked on its own. My “E” felt full of possibility, like putting on a bright shade of lipstick, like slipping into a slinky dress. Maybe this signaled the new me. I think of this story now, as I turn to my then-boyfriend, now husband, and say, “Maybe I’ll change my name. Take yours instead.” “If you want,” he says. Blessedly, he doesn’t mention that I’ve brought it up enough times over the course of our five-year marriage to become something of a joke. “I would love it, but really, it’s up to you.” At the time of our wedding, the time you’d think I would have answered this question once and for all, I never seriously considered taking his name. It wasn’t who I was. I liked my name, liked that it was different from his. A name struck me as the most incidental of connections. Why would we ever need to share one? And now — well, now things have changed. Now there are three of us. We have a daughter — a wondrous little girl — who at 17 months is just now saying her first name. I suspect she will not care much that her last name differs from her mother’s. I’m the one who feels a twinge when we receive invitations addressed to the three of us or see our names listed in our building’s directory — the awkwardness of having my husband’s and daughter’s names linked while mine remains alone. The myriad solutions that others have alighted on never felt right. Would you hyphenate Umansky? And yet I just can’t seem to take the plunge. Change the name I’ve always had, that long clunky name that somehow made it through Ellis Island and fought off the assimilating forces that followed? Change the name that links me not only to my brothers and paternal family but to the little town of Uman in Ukraine, where at the start of the Jewish New Year, thousands flock to the gravesite of Rabbi Nachman and chant, Uman, Uman, Rosh Hashanah? I decided long ago that I would retain my name professionally, so in many ways, changing it feels slightly ridiculous, a grand, hollow gesture. Perhaps it comes down to this: Five years ago, I worried about preserving my own identity. Now it feels equally important to carve out a collective identity for the three of us, my family. The last time I brought it up, my husband, daughter and I were walking on a nearly empty beach, on a glorious fall day. It was blissful, and I found myself thinking, with a nervous jab of excitement, Would this be the time I truly decided? I took my husband’s hand. “You’d change it legally?” he asked. I nodded. He smiled, and then his face clouded over. “What?” I asked. “Nothing,” he said. “It’s just — it’ll be a lot of paperwork.” I looked at him, and I felt just the tiniest bit relieved. And that, for the moment, was reason enough to leave things the way they were. ■
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Natural History
Natural History 综合性期刊-生态学
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