name
Rating: 30 point(s) | Read and rate text individuallyMy name is not important to anyone else. It does not tell them anything, but for me it is a sign that I am myself.
Amount of texts to »name« | 95, and there are 78 texts (82.11%) with a rating above the adjusted level (-3) |
Average lenght of texts | 296 Characters |
Average Rating | 6.221 points, 13 Not rated texts |
First text | on Mar 29th 2000, 17:52:47 wrote Zadya about name |
Latest text | on Oct 29th 2015, 13:06:55 wrote carolyn stewart about name |
Some texts that have not been rated at all
(overall: 13) |
on Oct 5th 2005, 21:44:02 wrote
on Oct 5th 2005, 21:43:36 wrote
on Oct 29th 2015, 09:44:55 wrote |
My name is not important to anyone else. It does not tell them anything, but for me it is a sign that I am myself.
human beings are »the naming animal.« if there is no name, we invent one. a thing isn't real till we've named it or so we tend to think.
The name »mez«
is also a bit challenging in relation to her actual real-life persona, as
several of her net.art pieces aren't credited to her as such, but
have various author titles attached mz post modemism,
mezchine, ms Tech.no.whore, flesque, e-mauler, and
mezflesque.exe (her latest incarnation). Ask the net.artist mez
about her real (birth) name and listen attentively through the
gagging noises that emanate from her throat. You might hear an
intelligible answer, but I doubt it. This isn't because she's got some
exotic speech impediment or strange form of throat disorder. It's
all down to the fact that since 1995 she's been changing her
author name almost as frequently as her hairstyle. And this
frequent name-changing behavior is somehow inextricably caught
up in her extensive net.art creations. I'd guesstimate that her alias
swapping has occurred about 8 times in the last 4 years. Better
yet, I'll just ask just her.
I was born with one name. Or rather two.
My own, my personal, my individual name. Eta. Eta. Eta I am and Eta I have always been.
But the second name of my name. That was never my own. Often changing, always given. Usually defined by man or culture or society or religion. Sonnok and Grey and Blue and Maverick.
Until finally I set aside the pretense. I embraced the reality. The tilde stands for all names, for all possibilities, in that there is only ever an approximation which labels but never defines.
I never hear the name, or read the name, of Yarmouth, but I am reminded of a certain Sunday morning on the beach, the bells ringing for church, little Em'ly leaning on my shoulder, Ham lazily dropping stones into the water, and the sun, away at sea, just breaking through the heavy mist, and showing us the ships, like their own shadows.
>>>
Scrooge never painted out Old Marley's name. There it stood, years afterwards, above the warehouse door: Scrooge and Marley. The firm was known as Scrooge and Marley. Sometimes people new to the business called Scrooge Scrooge, and sometimes Marley, but he answered to both names. It was all the same to him.
>>>
Deciding on the names of everyday objects can be a trial: couch or sofa or settee is merely one example of a trivial dilemma along these lines. Any distinctions to be drawn between these three are probably rather fine but the choice of a name will almost certainly convey something to the person you name it to. Us or them can be decided by something this simple.
Man knows the ninety-nine names of God only the camel knows the hundredth...Hence the snooty expression (on the face of the camel, that is).
Names have more significance for Catholics than they do for other people; Christian names are chosen for the spiritual qualities of the saints they are taken from; Protestants used to name their children out of the Old Testament and now they name them out of novels and films, whose heroes and heroines are perhaps the new patron saints of a secular age. But with Catholics it is different. The saint a child is named for is supposed to serve, literally, as a model or pattern to imitate; your name is your fortune and it tells you what you are or must be. Catholic children ponder their names for a mystic meaning, like birthstones.
If you think civilized people no longer take advantage of the weak and unprotected, just look at the names of they give to helpless infants.
There's this guy named Clarence. You hate him. Then you meet another guy named Clarence. This second Clarence has done nothing to you, but you will associate hime with the Clarence you hate and will probably be prejudiced. »No power in names,« you say? Think again. Not many kids named Adolf these days...
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