For some time now, it has been the de rigueur of society for women to take on their maiden surname together with their husband’s surname, acquired through marital annexure.
This resonates with a type of cultural identity. Timothy Maurice Webster in his motivational book, Soul to Sole, says among the many reasons names carry so much weight is that they give the brain an easy and efficient way to assign power, purpose and class. So what’s in a name, I ask?
Society values names to such an extent that they provide the very order we rely on, without which we would be blind to recognition.
In the Shakespearean drama, Romeo and Juliet, Romeo, out of his passion for Juliet, rejected his family name, denied his father, and at Juliet’s request,…