July 19, 2018
Posted by Jay Livingston
Harper, Avery, Aubrey, Riley, Addison were among the most popular fifty names for girls last year. These fit a general pattern — first they are names for boys, then become acceptable and often stylish for girls.
Often, once a name has crossed the gender line, parents of boys find it less and less attractive. In an earlier post (
here), I referred to this as the “there goes the neighborhood” effect. The lower-status group (in this case girls) move in, the higher-status group leaves. And they don’t come back.
Here’s Aubrey:
(Click on an image for a larger view.)
It doesn’t always happen that way, maybe not even most of the time. Charles Seguin has graphed several names, and in many cases the popularity of the name for boys increases even as the name grow popular for girls.
(Click on an image for a larger view.)
The lines don’t go in opposite directions, and are often closely parallel, popularity rising and falling for girls and boys and roughly the same time. But in every case — 27 names in all (I did not copy the other two of Seguin’s graphs) — once the name becomes more frequent for girls, once the blue line crosses to be above the red line, game over. Girls with that name continue to outnumber boys. (Seguin’s paper is
here.)
Things may be different in France, at least for one name. Baptiste Coulmont this week tweeted a graph of the name Camille. I know of only three French Camilles, two male — the Impressionist (or is it post-Impressionist?) artist Pissaro and the composer Saint-Saens, both born in the 1830s – and one female, sculptor Camille Claudel, sister of poet Paul Claudel, mistress of Rodin, born in 1864. (I know about her only because I saw the 1988 film with Isabel Adjani.)
Coulmont graphs the ratio of girl Camilles to boy Camilles. Through the first half of the 20th century, the name was twice as popular for boys. Then that relative poularity reverses until, by the turn of this century, there are 15 times as many girl babies given that name. But after 2000, the trend reverses towards boys just as rapidly as it had 30 years earlier for girls. The girl-boy ratio falls from 15:1 to 2:1.
Here is the graph showing frequqencies.
As might be expected, as the popularity of Camille among girls soared, the name lost popularity among boys, falling by 50% over the course of the 1990s. But then came the unusual reversal. As the name lost favor for girls, in rebounded among boys. Why are French boys returning to the Camille neighborhood as the girls flee? Coulmont does not offer any explanation, only the data. I don’t know enough about current French culture to speculate. For the few other androgynous French names I could find — Dominique, Claude, Yannick — the trends in popularity go in the same directions, separated sometimes by a few years. Camille is unique.
I do not have a full explanation. But my guess is that Camille (for boys) is partly boosted by second-generation immigrants (from North Africa or Turkey) in mixed marriage. This first name is close to the arabic version ("Kamil" ) which is also increasing.
ReplyDeleteMerci (et aussi de votre graphique). You're probably right, but I never have thought of that explanation.
ReplyDeleteJay:
ReplyDeleteIn your plots, I'd recommend a consistent use of red for girls and blue for boys. Some of the graphs you show have opposite color schemes, which makes everything hard to follow.
Andy:
ReplyDeleteI realized that. None of these graphs were of my own creation. I coped them from other sources -- Name Voyager, Baptiste Coulmont's tweet, Charles Seguin's paper. I don't know why Sequin chose the blue-for-girls color scheme, but I didn't know how to reverse the colors.
Prénoms masculin hawaien par ordre alphabétique, retrouvez la liste des idées pour un prénom hawaien pour garçon. Tout savoir sur sa signification
ReplyDeletePrénoms de garçon hawaien