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Wednesday, 7 April 2010

St. Julian of Norwich was a woman. So was George Eliot and so is Princess Michael of Kent. Dominique de Villepin, however, is a man, as is Dominique-nique-nique in that song. Perhaps most Dominiques are men. I don't know. Perfectly coiffed hair, pretty clothes or a handbag tells you only that they are French.

Gareth Pierce, the dozy bint lawyer who defended jihadist Mozzam Begg is a woman. Can there be a sillier name for a woman than Gareth? For sure: Lionel. As in Lionel Shriver, the novelist. I only just found out she was a woman. What a daft name. Apparently, she's really a Margaret. Ann. Now I understand a writer wanting a gender-neutral name like A. S. Byatt or J. K. Rowling. If the latter had used "Joanne", many boys would have dismissed her novels as "girly". And I certainly understand why women used male pseudonyms in the days of George Eliot. I could even understand if Margaret Ann were a Jackie or a Lesley or a Hilary, or a plain Tom, Dick or Harry. But Lionel? It's as bad as Tarquin. Apparently her/his/its novel isn't up to much: From The Times:

There is a lot of diarrhoea in Lionel Shriver’s ninth novel, not all of it related to the plot. The improbably named Shep Knacker is planning to retire from New York to Pemba, an island near Zanzibar, when his wife Glynis develops peritoneal mesothelioma, an uncommon form of cancer. Meanwhile, his best friend Jackson has had to join his wife Carol in coping with their daughter Flicka’s familial dysautonomia, an even rarer and more humiliating illness. We hear plenty about enemas and bleeding anuses as Shriver tries to confront the cost of keeping dying people alive.

Her supporting cast are stick figures for use in polemics on contemporary America, trapped within her distressingly poor prose. She wants us to believe in Shep’s pious father, his introverted son, his egomaniacal sister and his greedy boss, but they remain resolutely implausible. There are unconvincing gestures towards Shep’s and Jackson’s inner lives. Jackson has a catastrophic extension to his “fifth appendage” because there were “limits to his own disaffection with the phallus of conventional proportions”. Shep dreams of a house with a rotten wooden frame — he renovates buildings and his wife has cancer, you see. Passages like these restate characters’ dilemmas without illuminating them.

Shep? That was the dog on Blue Peter. And Knacker? She's having a laugh, surely? Sadly, I don't think so - her choice of names suggests she lacks a sense of the ridiculous.

Posted on 04/07/2010 2:39 PM by Mary Jackson
Comments
7 Apr 2010
Esmerelda Weatherwax

It is possible that Julian of Norwich took the name of the church where she was anchoress as it was named after one of the St Julians (probably St Julian the Hospitaller) years before she had her revelations. If she did then her birth name is now unknown.
Some documents refer to her as Dame or Mother Juliana but consistent spelling wasn't a 14th century trait.



7 Apr 2010
Send an emailMary Jackson

Makes sense. I've seen Julien (with an e) as a girl's name. But never Gareth or Lionel, that's just daft.



7 Apr 2010
Paul Blaskowicz

Dominique de Villepin, however, is a man, as is Dominique-nique-nique in that song.

Poor Sister Smile - this has a very sad ending:

"The singing Nun was Sister Luc-Gabrielle (born Jeanine Deckers), from a Fichermont, Belgium convent. (Not to be confused with The Flying Nun. That was Sally Field.)
 
In 1966, a movie about the nun's life starring Debbie Reynolds was made. It bombed.

After the release of the movie, Sister Luc-Gabrielle left the convent and tried to maintain her recording career, this time under her real name - Jeanine Decker.She became a bit of a rebel, with singles like 'Glory Be to God for the Golden Pill,' a hymn to birth control.
 
She embraced her lesbian sexuality and was pursued by the Belgian government over unpaid taxes relating to this song. Drug problems complicated matters even more.
 
In 1985, Jeanine Decker and her partner of 10 years, Annie Pecher, committed suicide. Their centre for autistic children had closed its doors, and they 'lost all courage in the face of a losing battle with the tax people.'"


7 Apr 2010
Send an emailEsmerelda Weatherwax

I knew the Singing Nun left her order - I didn't know she had such a sad life thereafter.
As for the Flying Nun, I loved that programme (I was very young) but didn't realise anybody else left alive on the planet remembered it.

Gareth Pierce has form on this site as a calculating (anything but dozy) bint.

 



7 Apr 2010
Esmerelda WEatherwax

The Flying Nun was made in colour???!!!
I only ever saw it in B&W. It was years before we got colour.



7 Apr 2010
Send an emailDavid Hamilton

Actually, Mary, Private Eye magazines comical copper was "Knacker of the Yard"!



18 Apr 2010
Send an emailDavid Gillies

 Shep Knacker? Oh, my sides. It sounds like a name Michael Wharton would coin for one of his characters in his Peter Simple column.





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