When writing about a 'titled' person - Mark Elder, Paul McCartney, Harrison Birtwistle - do you automatically award them their 'title' or do you refer to them as I have done, withholding the 'honour'?
I think it's very strange and unnatural to do - over-formal, if you like, and also suggesting you 'buy in' to the idea that these titled people are somehow 'better' than little old un-titlted you.
Hst, I wouldn't call someone out for accepting an 'honour' (though my use of inverted commas indicates how I feel about them). If I was offered one - even a humble CBE/OBE - I'd accept it. Not because it I like the idea of having one or because it would make me feel superior to others - more, because so many others feel that, if you have a title, you are superior to them. And, life being what it is, that can help....
'Wow, you spoke to a knight', someone said to me recently when I mentioned I'd had a conversation with the Halle Orchestra's Principal Conductor (who isn't stuffy and seems to be known by his first name even to casual acquaintances).
Having an honour certainly helps - it will probably get you a 'good' table in a restaurant that claims to be fully booked and if you're an actor or a writer, it may up your going rate - but I don't see any reason why it should be permanently appended to your name, as if it makes you some kind of superior being.
Sir Ben Kingsley probably disagrees, of course....
What do others think?
I think it's very strange and unnatural to do - over-formal, if you like, and also suggesting you 'buy in' to the idea that these titled people are somehow 'better' than little old un-titlted you.
Hst, I wouldn't call someone out for accepting an 'honour' (though my use of inverted commas indicates how I feel about them). If I was offered one - even a humble CBE/OBE - I'd accept it. Not because it I like the idea of having one or because it would make me feel superior to others - more, because so many others feel that, if you have a title, you are superior to them. And, life being what it is, that can help....
'Wow, you spoke to a knight', someone said to me recently when I mentioned I'd had a conversation with the Halle Orchestra's Principal Conductor (who isn't stuffy and seems to be known by his first name even to casual acquaintances).
Having an honour certainly helps - it will probably get you a 'good' table in a restaurant that claims to be fully booked and if you're an actor or a writer, it may up your going rate - but I don't see any reason why it should be permanently appended to your name, as if it makes you some kind of superior being.
Sir Ben Kingsley probably disagrees, of course....
What do others think?
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