What is implied in calling someone "Citizen"?
In many dystopian stories, people call each other citizen. In other contexts too, I'm thinking Citizen Kane for example. Why? What is implied here?
Solution 1:
It's backlash against titles of nobility particularly, and the idea that some families or occupations deserve special treatment in general, by giving the exact same title to everyone, regardless of gender, birth, education, or position. I believe you'll find a non-English equivalent was frequently used during the French revolution. "Comrade" is also used, but while both express equality, "Citizen" implies allegiance to country, "Comrade" implies allegiance to party.
It displaces:
- Sir (in reference to knighthood)
- His Lordship
- His Honor
- His Highness
- Doctor
- Professor
and so on, all of which recognize inequality of position.
In a society which wishes to express respect for individual accomplishment but not inheritance, it might be combined with an occupation-linked honorific:
- Citizen Doctor
- Citizen Professor
Solution 2:
"Citizen" has a long history of being a proud title. Cicero gave voice to this sentiment when he declaimed "Civis Romanus sum" ("I am a citizen of Rome") in his Actiones in Verrem. It is at once patriotic and exclusive; a citizen enjoyed certain rights and protections and was the equal of any other citizen.
We must remember that much of English has been influenced by the classical education given to its ruling class. From the same Wikipedia article:
"The locution was quoted by Lord Palmerston when called to explain his decision to blockade Greece. In his speech in the Houses of Parliament on June 25, 1850 he claimed that every British subject in the world should be protected by the British Empire like a Roman citizen in the Roman Empire."
Spoken normally as a respectful way to address someone, it undergoes a transformation: the dystopian novel adds an ironic element to the title, since the "rights and protections" afforded a citizen are somewhat turned upside down. They become vulnerabilities and liabilities.
Now, there is another meaning to "Citizen" which implies that someone who is grand and rich and lordly may be styled "Citizen" to denote that he is a man of the people. This is, I believe, what Orson Welles meant by calling Charles Foster Kane (the thinly veiled image of William Randolph Hearst, who built a publishing empire and tried to use it to bend the country to his will) "Citizen Kane". This man fancied himself a populist, yet lived in San Simeon, one of the most expensive and lavish estates since Louis XIV's Versailles and the various imperial palaces of the Roman emperors. So the title is used ironically.