Albanian (Catholic) Wedding, Bronx, NY, 1986

    Item Description
    Description

    After putting on her shoe, her brother kisses tearful Julie farewell. This is good bye because no member of her family may attend the nuptials by which she joins another clan. She must endure adjustment to her marriage and in-laws without family interest or sympathy.

    Katrina Thomas's notes: An Albanian wedding in the Bronx, NY in 1986 retains unique customs based on tribal culture which signal that a bride is joining another clan. Marriages are arranged but a matched pair may refuse the partner. On the morning of the wedding, while the bride dresses, her family entertains guests at a large celebration. When she is ready to go to church, they say farewell to their daughter because they will not attend either her nuptials or the bridegroom's reception in the evening. In fact, after the wedding she is not permitted to see her family or return to her childhood home for a specified number of days. When she does visit, she is no longer treated like a daughter but as a guest. For a year after marriage, she is considered to be a bride and when her own sisters enter a room she stands in respect. As Albanians have become Americanized many of these customs have been dropped.

    Linked Agent
    Photographer (pht): Thomas, Katrina
    Physical Form
    Date Created
    1986
    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_07-02
    PID
    bmc:59879
    Record Content Source
    Rights Statement
    Note

    Photographer's categories: Prenuptial rite , Bride , Best man , Ring