tlb wrote:I do not agree, Allison seems to be trying to live outside of her families influence and that may include refusing financial support. Beowulf does not have royalty, but her family there is certainly prominent. Even the early books comment that her marriage was not just out of love, but also a reaction against the norms on Beowulf (but I cannot find an example of that right now).
It may have been later than you were remembering. We don't seem to have gotten her full name until mainline book 11 (At All Costs)
Still once we started getting details it's clear that not only didn't Alison want to rely on her family's wealth, she didn't want to rely on their name either. Fundraising for her own clinic based off of calling on her familial dynasty's prestige would have been totally against the grain for her. (Plus for something like a decade after she and Alfred returned to Manticore he was committed to 15 years miliary service (in the Manticoran military health system) as recompense for his military scholarship to study advanced medicine on Beowulf.
Even if Alison had wanted to start her own genetic practice it likely would have cause more separations from Alfred as he was likely reassigned several times over that decade and a half.
Plus many people hate dealing with the fundraising and business side of a company; but that's utterly unavoidable if trying to become a successful start-up. Even if Allison was willing to play on her family's fame, and even if she brought in partners to run the business side so she could focus on the genetic work that fascinated her, she'd
still constantly be getting dragged out in the early years to schmooze potential investors and let them see the Beowulfian "royalty" they'd be potentially investing their money in. I don't know how she'd feel about that, but I'd find that moderately hellish; I'm much happier within an established company where I can focus on the technology and not on being a manager, developing business, or trying to raise funding.
So I don't find it as all surprising that she largely kept her family connection quiet and simply rose, without fanfare, on her own merits.
Anyway, here are a few applicable quotes.
Uncompromising Honor wrote:“I’m not surprised she doesn’t have a lot to say about the family name. For that matter, I don’t think she even thinks about it much, thanks to Allison.” Benton-Ramirez y Chou smiled faintly. “My sister was determined to get as far away from any Beowulf ‘dynasties’ as she possibly could, and she did a damned good job of it. So I’m sure that until she fell into Benjamin Mayhew’s clutches, Honor really did think of herself as a simple yeoman’s daughter.
Beginnings wrote:But Allison had always been the one who chafed the most severely at being a Benton-Ramirez y Chou. She understood—and often resented—her family’s prominence, the way its members were “expected” to go into public service or politics as well as—or even in addition to—medical careers.
Beginnings wrote:“For the same reason they hung all those names on me in the first place. Because I want to be me, not just another Benton-Ramirez y Chou buried under all those tons of family history and tradition. Nobody on Beowulf would dream of forcing me to do anything I didn’t want to do . . . and that won’t stop them for an instant from doing it anyway. I don’t want to be preprogrammed. I want to know—to know, Alfred—that the decisions I make are my decisions. And I don’t want to be some kind of . . . of medical royalty. I want to be just Allison