Friday, October 14, 2016
The Significance of a Name
William, Shaniqua, Antonio, Chang, Ali. What comes to question when reading these gains? Im pretty sealedly that most of the time, when someone sees or hears hears such as these, the first thought is to racially classify each someone according to his or her adduce. though we may not put one across it, ball club t arrests to classify us by the take we hold, therefrom impacting our destiny.\nIn his essay duty assignment Our Destiny, Arnold M. Kee describes the dilemma he and his wife faced when trying to take root on a reach for their newlyborn boy. While Mrs. Kee wanted an African name to link [their son] to [their] heathenish heritage, Kee preferred a to a greater extent culturally neutral name, to screen out [their] sons résumé or take applications from prejudice (72). Evidently, Kee realized that society sometimes discriminates against someone base on his or her name. For that reason, Kee wished to cheer his son from discrimination by choosing a name that was not identifiably African (78). Finally, they end up picking the name Spencer Madison, confident that this given name will in receivable course take on African American nub (78). Though it would choose been separate for them to not need to devotion the possible outcomes of giving their son a certain name, I believe its right-hand(a) they took that into consideration.\nI can personally relate to Kees story, because the name that was given to me has somehow wedged my destiny too. Although both my pargonnts are Mexican, my first and middle label pay off no property of my Mexican heritage. In fact, everyone in my family (besides my parents and br other(a)s and sisters) calls me Christina because they believe thats the name my parents should have given me in the first place! not just family, but other Spanish-speaking people I know also swear on Christina. I have even had teachers make sure that my name wasnt spelled falsely on the class roster. Who would have thought that one midget vowel could have...
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