Name repetition versus use of pronouns versus other identifiers

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There was a start to an important discussion a few years ago at The Old Place

Switching between names and pronouns

Several people got some good thoughts in, prominent among them @Seven Crowns besides myself.

The topic bears revisitation and further discussion.

I was making the point, less explicitly than now, that using a character's name has several purposes for me. The first, obviously, is establishing him or her as a named character — though few things annoy me more than seeing every story begin with the name of the main character and an action verb. Howard Roark laughed. Okay, maybe it was new then. Or de rigueur. It's far more sophisticated IMO to begin with something else about the situation. And if beginning with a character, I'm immediately more engaged if they're at first an anonymous 'he' or 'she'. (I know there are groups that preach the exact opposite of what I'm saying, and well, they succeed in producing certain types of writers of mass-market fiction. So if that's your goal, maybe you shouldn't be listening to me.)

As evild4ve (I believe) pointed out over there, the choice is not merely between name and pronoun—its a choice among name, pronoun, and an alternate identifier like 'the old man'. I would add that the possibilities to bear in mind are first name, first-and-last name, honorific-plus-last-name, alternate identifier/descriptor, and pronoun. Each of these brings a different tone and often a different purpose to an instance of the name.

The second and third purposes for me to use or repeat a name, though I'm not sure in which order, are disambiguation and emphasis.

But once a character is named, I'm perfectly happy with repeating the name every page or every second page or so — UNLESS certain triggering circumstances come earlier. To me, if there's any science in name repetition, it resides in listing the circumstances requiring a repetition. It would seem that all through at least the last 50 years of the 1900s, everybody in the business knew the unwritten set of rules for name repetition. At least revered writers were remarkably consistent, and it's hard to know how much of that was their own knowledge and how much was their editors' influence. Hemingway struggled a bit with this early on, but he was writing in a different literary era than we do today, struggling in fact to create what was then the modern era. He made the stylistic choice to refer to Robert Jordan as Robert Jordan every damn time. It sort of adds to the primitive-mountain-living-among-partisans feeling, so it wasn't a bad decision, but Scott Fitzgerald was, I would say more at home with the stylistic implications in names.

The easiest way to learn the old established practice is to read masters of it. John Fowles is one. The Magus, although otherwise a heavy read for many, is a great place to see when and how he repeats a name versus using a pronoun or descriptor. (He's also a great place to learn dialogue.) Plus if you want to know where the postmodern literary era we're all part of came from, he and Lawrence Durrell are pretty much its trailblazers.

One trigger for repetition, the most obvious one, is the mention of another character of the same gender. Or sometimes not of the same gender. After that, it's obviously necessary to use Character A's name when you again refer to Character A. For one thing, 'he' or 'she' would naturally refer to the most recently named character of that gender. But it's more than that. Even if there were no ambiguity, it would feel flimsy or dismissive to use a pronoun.

Another use (more than a trigger) for repetition is similar to a section marker. I've seen writing that repeats a name like clockwork for the first mention in every new paragraph. That's way overboard, of course—clumsy, bizarre-sounding, heavy-handed, whatever you want to call it. But using a name is like a slightly fresh start on the subject, akin—many of my reference points for style in writing come from classical music — to referring briefly back to the A theme. Or consider it like another bang with a mallet on the wooden tent stake.

Another kind of emphasis is seen in something like "But Robert was nobody's fool" or "Robert Fisher wasn't having any of it." Attaching a little (or a lot) more formality to the name adds weight to the statement about the character.

For now, I'm going to break this here so that others can add their insights and refinements.
 
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(I know there are groups that preach the exact opposite of what I'm saying, and well, they succeed in producing certain types of writers of mass-market fiction. So if that's your goal, maybe you shouldn't be listening to me.)
I'm one of those who vehemently dislikes starting with a pronoun (when writing in 3rd person), and I take exception to the implication that starting with the character's name is somehow a sign of bad or generic writing.

My objection to starting with he/she is twofold. One, it adds nothing to the story to not name the character. Unless the character doesn't know their own name, then there's no reason not to use it. The second reason is that, if you were telling a story to a friend, you would never start a story that way. If you did, the first question your friend would ask you is "who?"

I've seen so many stories where the author doesn't name the character, sometimes not for a while, and I find it highly annoying. I want to have a name attached to the character. The entire time I'm reading, I'm waiting for the character to be identified, and it's a distraction. YMMV.

As evild4ve (I believe) pointed out over there, the choice is not merely between name and pronoun—its a choice among name, pronoun, and an alternate identifier like 'the old man'. I would add that the possibilities to bear in mind are first name, first-and-last name, honorific-plus-last-name, alternate identifier/descriptor, and pronoun. Each of these brings a different tone and often a different purpose to an instance of the name.
Alternate identifiers should conform to the chosen POV.

If I'm writing in 3rd limited from John's perspective, and I refer to him as "the old man," that may be a break in POV. John isn't going to think about himself in those terms most of the time. He would need a reason to refer to himself in that way. Example.

It had only been two days since John dropped his daughter off at college, and he was already itching to go back and check on her. He resisted that impulse, though. Mary didn't want her old man showing up and embarrassing her.

In this case, John refers to himself as "old man" because he is being self-deprecating. It is very much in his POV.

It had only been two days since John dropped his daughter off at college, and he was already itching to go back and check on her. The old man resisted that impulse, though. Mary didn't want him showing up and embarrassing her.

This doesn't have the same self-deprecating connotations as "her old man" and would constitute a break in POV, IMO.

On the larger topic, the reason these types of discussions often come up is because writers do other things poorly and they end up trying to fix the symptom rather than the root cause.

One of those things is the excessive use of filters. He looked, she heard, he wondered, she felt. Most of the time, these can be cut. Cutting them can reduce the number of names/pronouns significantly, alleviating the need to use alternate references.

There are other things that can help with the repetition, like varying sentence structures and focusing more on things external to the character, but the filters are typically the biggest offenders.
 
It depends on the narrator though, yes? I always define my narrator as a character. The narrator might be very to the point and explain the scene with precise, godlike knowledge; nothing is held back, and certainly nothing is false. Or he might be more distant, poetic, sarcastic, or any number of things and refuse to name a character. So if the narrator notices the MC in scene, the choice of how that MC is named for the reader can take many turns. The narrator might not even understand who he's seeing—he's more of a casual observer on par with the reader—and only context clues later explain who the MC is.

I say "he," but it depends on the story, naturally.

Thinking about this, I'm not sure if I have a preference. I have favorite stories where the MC is named in full in the first paragraph and favorites where the MC doesn't ever get a name.
 
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