Thursday, April 15, 2010

What's in a Name?

What would Lucy Stone say? She was a 19th-century suffragist who was the first American woman to revert to her birth name after marriage. She even had to chastise one Susan B. Anthony by writing to Suze, "A wife should no more take her husband's name than he should hers." Stone's followers—women who refused to change their names upon marriage—were called Stoners.

Today only about 20 percent of American women are Stoners. In other words, 80 percent of women change their identities—I mean, names—upon getting married.

It makes me wish we were a more progressive country like…Iran. Yes, Iran, where Muslim women keep their names for life. So must women, by law , keep their names in Belgium, France, Italy, the Netherlands, Chile, Malaysia, Korea…I could go on, but I really like the way they do it in Spain.

There, people have two surnames—their father's and their mother's. When they have a child, she receives the first surname from the father and the second surname is the first surname of the mother, and the parents choose whether the father's or the mother's surname goes first, although this order must be the same for all their children.

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