Why Your Identity Defies Labels


Identity Beyond Labels – Name Tradition…

What is your middle name? Does it carry any special meaning/significance?


I don’t have a traditional middle name, but my first name, Johnbritto, carries its own layered significance. It merges “John,” a colonial Christian name, with “Britto,” honouring St. John de Britto, a 17th-century missionary to India. In my Tamil tradition, names aren’t always split into neat Western categories—identity is woven into a single, meaningful whole.

The Hidden Symphony of Names:

Introduction: The Mystery in the Middle
Names is the first poetry we ever wear. They carry whispers of ancestry, cultural fingerprints, and sometimes, delightful puzzles. When WordPress prompted me to dissect my middle name, I realized: What if the absence of a middle name is its own kind of story?

 Let’s unravel the tapestry of naming traditions, linguistic quirks, and the quiet rebellion of identities that refuse to fit into boxes.

1. Middle Names: A Western Invention with Global Echoes

Middle names, as we know them, are largely a Western construct. In 15th-century Europe, aristocrats began using second names to honour saints or relatives. By the 19th century, middle names trickled into everyday use, symbolizing heritage or aspiration. But globally, naming conventions dance to different rhythms:

  • Iceland: No family surnames—individuals use patronymics (e.g., Björk Guðmundsdóttir = Björk, daughter of Guðmundur).
  • Tamil Nadu, India: Many omit middle names entirely, blending ancestral village names, father’s initials, or spiritual epithets into a single lyrical string.
  • Arab cultures: Long chains of names trace lineage (ibn/bint = son/daughter of) like a genealogical map.

My name, Johnbritto Kurusumuthu, mirrors this Tamil tradition. “Kurusumuthu” is the name of my father, while “Johnbritto” fuses two names into one—a common practice in Christian Tamil communities to honour saints (St. John de Britto, a 17th-century missionary to India). Here, the “middle” isn’t a separate slot—it’s woven into the first name itself.

2. The Linguistics of Squished Names

When names merge, they defy Western templates. Hyphens, spaces, or fused spellings aren’t mere typos—they’re cultural codes.

  • Case Study: Johnbritto vs. John Britto
    • With a space: Follows the Western trifecta (First, Middle, Last).
    • Without a space: Becomes a portmanteau, common in cultures where compound names signify unity (e.g., Maryann in English, Annapurna in Sanskrit).

My fused first name isn’t a missing middle—it’s a bridge between two worlds: the colonial legacy of “John” and the Tamil reverence for “Britto.”

3. The Myth of the “Missing” Middle Name

Why do we assume everyone must have a middle name? The question itself is culturally myopic. In many societies, including mine, the concept doesn’t exist—and that’s liberating.

  • The Japanese: Rarely use middle names; instead, kanji characters embed layers of meaning.
  • Indonesians: Many have single names, like Sukarno or Megawati.

My name’s structure isn’t an oversight—it’s a quiet protest against homogenization.

4. Names as Time Travelers

Every name is a fossil of history. “Kurusumuthu” likely stems from kurusumam (Tamil for saffron) + muthu (pearl), evoking imagery of wealth or beauty. “Britto” nods to St. John de Britto, martyred in 17th-century India for defending indigenous customs against colonial imposition. Together, my name carries echoes of resistance and hybridity—a fusion of European sanctity and Tamil earthiness.

5. Rewriting the Rules: Identity Beyond Grammar

If syntax can’t contain us, why let it define us? Here’s a radical idea: You are your own middle name.

  • The “Middle” as Metaphor: The space between your given and family names is where you live—the choices, passions, and stories that no document can capture.
  • Play the Architect: In an era of fluid identities, why not claim a middle name that reflects your essence? (I’ve unofficially adopted “Kurusumuthu” as both a surname and a reminder of my roots.)

Conclusion: The Unnamed Symphony
My middle name isn’t missing—it’s just hiding in plain sight, stitched into the seams of my first name. And perhaps that’s the point: names aren’t puzzles to solve but melodies to interpret. They’re living things, shaped by migration, faith, and the quiet defiance of belonging to many worlds at once.

So, what’s your middle name? Maybe it’s not in the blanks. Maybe it’s the unwritten verse you’re still composing.

Epilogue:
Fun fact: In 2021, a Norwegian man legally named “@” (yes, the symbol) argued that names are art. The court disagreed, but his fight reminds us: that identity is the original rebellion.

This post blends cultural anthropology, linguistic analysis, and personal narrative—a fresh lens for a timeless question. No middle names were harmed in the making.

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The Hidden Meanings Behind Middle Names

What is your middle name? Does it carry any special meaning/significance?

My middle name is John Britto. It holds special significance as it’s rooted in the inspiring life of Saint John de Britto, reflecting my parents’ admiration for his story and character.

John Britto

A middle name is a name that falls between the first name and the last name. For instance, in the name “William John Smith”, “John” is the middle name. Middle names are often abbreviated using just the initial, like “W. John Smith”.

Middle names hold special meaning or significance, but it’s not always the case.

Some reasons why people choose a middle name:

Family tradition: Sometimes, middle names are chosen to honour a relative, like a grandparent or an aunt/uncle.

Meaningful name: People pick a name with a specific meaning they like.

Second option: In some cases, parents might have two names they love and can’t decide between, so they use one as a middle name.

Cultural practice: In some cultures, it’s customary to include the mother’s maiden name as the middle name.

On the other hand, some people just choose a middle name that sounds good with their first and last name, without any particular reason.

let’s break down middle names with some examples to make it clearer:

Family Tradition:

Imagine a family where the firstborn son is traditionally named after the father, but with “John” as a middle name. So it could have William John Smith, followed by his son, Charles John Smith, and so on. This way, the middle name honours the grandfather while keeping the tradition of the first name alive.

Meaningful Name:

Let’s say parents are expecting a baby girl and they admire the qualities of strength and bravery. They choose “Claire” as the first name and “Victoria” (meaning “victory” in Latin) as the middle name. Here, “Victoria” carries a specific meaning they hope their daughter embodies.

Second Option:

Parents might love the names “Alexander” and “Liam” for their son. They can’t decide between the two, so they choose “Alexander Liam” – “Alexander” becomes the first name and “Liam” becomes the middle name.

Cultural Practice:

In some parts of Spain, it’s customary to have two middle names. The first middle name is the father’s last name, and the second middle name is the mother’s last name. For example, Isabel García Fernández would have García (father’s name) and Fernández (mother’s name) as her middle names.

Just Because:

There’s nothing wrong with simply choosing a middle name that sounds good with the first and last name! Maybe the parents love the rhythm of “Olivia Rose Miller” without any specific deeper meaning behind “Rose.”

Remember, middle names can hold a lot of significance for some people, but they can also just be another part of your full name. It all depends on the reason they were chosen!

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