Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Wedding Dress Across Cultures
View through CrossRef
Although the Victorian white wedding dominates western bridal dress and large portions of former colonial empires, marriage rituals vary significantly throughout the world. The Japanese, for instance, combine both traditional ceremonies with receptions utilizing western approaches to dress. In the Andes the bride will personally create a multi-layered dress to showcase her weaving skills. Berber brides in Morocco wear binding clothing that covers their faces, a notable contrast to Canadian prairie-province brides whose stylized gowns individualize and enhance body shape. This engaging book examines the evolution and ritual functions of wedding attire within the context of particular cultures. It raises questions as to the relationship between contemporary wedding attire and traditional values. It discusses the changes international migrations have had upon the wedding dress of several ethnic groups. It provides insights into numerous societal relationships to weddings, such as the ban on bridal-produced embroidery in dowries in India, the challenges individual values have to larger societal ones in themed weddings, and the relationship between the return to pre-western attire and identity politics. Exploring these issues, the authors provide unusual insights into the centrality of dress in shaping individual identity as well as its importance in reflecting cultural values and ideals.
Oxford International Publishers Ltd
Title: Wedding Dress Across Cultures
Description:
Although the Victorian white wedding dominates western bridal dress and large portions of former colonial empires, marriage rituals vary significantly throughout the world.
The Japanese, for instance, combine both traditional ceremonies with receptions utilizing western approaches to dress.
In the Andes the bride will personally create a multi-layered dress to showcase her weaving skills.
Berber brides in Morocco wear binding clothing that covers their faces, a notable contrast to Canadian prairie-province brides whose stylized gowns individualize and enhance body shape.
This engaging book examines the evolution and ritual functions of wedding attire within the context of particular cultures.
It raises questions as to the relationship between contemporary wedding attire and traditional values.
It discusses the changes international migrations have had upon the wedding dress of several ethnic groups.
It provides insights into numerous societal relationships to weddings, such as the ban on bridal-produced embroidery in dowries in India, the challenges individual values have to larger societal ones in themed weddings, and the relationship between the return to pre-western attire and identity politics.
Exploring these issues, the authors provide unusual insights into the centrality of dress in shaping individual identity as well as its importance in reflecting cultural values and ideals.
Related Results
Wedding, Gender, and Performance in Ancient Greece
Wedding, Gender, and Performance in Ancient Greece
Abstract
This book traces the wedding song tradition, its imagery, and its tropes as a genre that gets crystallized throughout the ages. It explores how wedding poet...
Religion, Dress and the Body
Religion, Dress and the Body
Religions constrain the bodies of their members through dress. In many cases, dress immediately identifies a member of the community to the outside world and separates them from a ...
Hinterland Warriors and Military Dress
Hinterland Warriors and Military Dress
Much of the exotic dress of the armies of Europe and elsewhere has its origins in the conditions of frontier wars fought by imperial armies. As states have expanded to control hint...
African Dress
African Dress
Dress and fashion practices in Africa and the diaspora are dynamic and diverse, whether on the street or on the fashion runway.
Focusing on the dressed body as a performa...
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Postcolonial Print Cultures
The Bloomsbury Handbook of Postcolonial Print Cultures
The texts that make up postcolonial print cultures are often found outside the archival catalogue, and in lesser-examined repositories such as personal collections, the streets, or...
The Modern Venus
The Modern Venus
From rumps and stays to muffs and handkerchiefs, underwear and accessories were critical components of the 18th-century woman’s wardrobe. They not only created her shape, but expre...
Daily Life through World History in Primary Documents
Daily Life through World History in Primary Documents
Who did the ancient Greeks describe as the world's best athlete? What does the Koran say about women's rights? How has the digital revolution changed life in the modern age? From t...
The Sioux and Other Native American Cultures of the Dakotas
The Sioux and Other Native American Cultures of the Dakotas
This volume focuses on the Native American cultures that have existed across the Dakotas in relative isolation from external influences. A chapter entitled Prehistory contains cita...

