Dear all,
I confess I'm having a good time with this discussion! It's fascinating to see how differently people react when their names are involved, I think it might have to do with identities. Since I'm not very good at that, is there anyone here who could tell us if there's a study on that?
Ana
Tony Whitson <twhitson@UDel.Edu> escreveu:
On Thu, 13 Dec 2007, Ana Paula B. R. Cortez wrote:
> Dear David (Professor Kellog? Mr Kellog? Mr David?),
>
How about "Professor David"?
I saw this when at Louisiana State University, in the southern
plantation-area part of the US. Faculty from the north generally wanted to
be addressed by our first names (if not by students, at least by our
department staff); but it was clear to me that for some life-long
Louisiana residents this was a difficult if not painful violation of
deeply habituated norms. So I didn't resist being addressed as "Dr.
Whitson."
I had a very different experience in Taipei (Taibei) in the early 1970's.
For a few weeks one summer, there was a group of students there from a
U.S. university supervised by a faculty member who was generally referred
to as "Professor Smith." The local Taiwan students became outraged when
they found out that he was not really a Professor, but only an Assistant
Professor. They felt that he had been perpetrating some sort of monstrous
fraud on them.
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Received on Fri Dec 14 02:17 PST 2007
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