“What's in a name? That which we call a rose
By any other name would smell as sweet”
From
Romeo & Juliet by Shakespeare
What’s in a name?
Actually, a lot. (Sorry, Juliet)
Depending on the type of story,
character names can be allegorical, (rife with meaning alluding to their
function, such as in biblical narratives) a play on class and setting, (think
of just about any romance story) or a tickle to the funny bone.
There is overlap in these naming categories.
I think Dickens played on the humorous as well as class distinctions. J. K.
Rowling does the same with some of her characters. But no matter the intention,
the effect is for a name to be evocative.
There are times where a story doesn’t
call for strong and piercing name choices. But I would never waste the
storyteller’s opportunity to make a tale come alive with banal choices like
Dick and Jane, which, come to think of it, may have been chosen specifically
for a banal effect. They are “every girl and every boy,” I suppose. Not
characters in the sense writers aspire to create.
Some choices are personal, as in a
grandma writing a story using her grandkids' names. As such, they are fine for self-publishing
home consumption. I’ve written short stories using the names of my nearest and
dearest, which have meaning to me only. But from some years’ distance, I can
see that for general audiences I have wasted the opportunity to layer every
word by not choosing in a writerly way.
So back to Juliet: Love who you love, my
sweet, and let your names not keep you apart. But for certain know that William
Shakespeare chose your names with
care.