Vietnamese Wedding, Oakland, CA, 1989

    Item Description
    Description

    In the banquet hall, decorated for the newlyweds, Cap and Luong, still wearing their western church attire, are introduced to their 400 wedding guests, after which everyone dines on a nine-course meal.

    Katrina Thomas's notes: Under a special act of Congress, refugees from Vietnam were first admitted to the U.S. after the fall of Saigon in April 1975. They included ethnic Chinese, Eurasians and Amerasians born there, most of whom are Christian. Vietnamese have settled largely in Texas, and in California, the state in which I photograph them. Weddings start at the bride's house with a formal introduction of the two families, followed by bestowing jewelry on her by the bridegroom's family, and progress to the bridegroom's house to honor his family. In their home country, their own customs were influenced previously by French culture so that couples here adapt rapidly to American ways. The ethnic nuptial rite has been superseded by the Christian rite or a Buddhist blessing.

    Linked Agent
    Photographer (pht): Thomas, Katrina
    Physical Form
    Date Created
    1989
    Geographic Subject
    Extent
    1 photograph : black-and-white
    Resource Type
    Internet Media Type
    image/tiff
    Digital Origin
    Institution
    Library
    Shelf Locator
    BMC-M59
    Local Identifier
    BMC-M59_63-12
    PID
    bmc:59542
    Record Content Source
    Rights Statement
    Note

    Photographer's categories: Feast and reception , Newlyweds , Bridal apparel , Welcome , Sharing food