Along similiar lines, I spent some time researching official etiquette on weddings for a friend of mine who was married this last summer. One of the biggie topics was male bridesmaids and female ushers. I forget which of the many etiquette manuals made this point, but it said that traditionally the bride's attendents were female and the groom's attendents were male simply because that's the gender their friends were. There weren't any men attending the bride because she wasn't friends with any men.
Only in the last few decades has it been widely socially acceptable to be close friends with a member of the opposite sex. In the recent past, folks got around this bias by putting the groom's female friend with the bridesmaids and the bride's brother with the ushers. Social attitudes have now come even further. This fact is now slowly changing the gender distribution of the modern wedding party. More and more people are putting the bride's friends with her and the groom's friends with him, regardless of gender.
This trivia brought to you today by Sylvia's Hindbrain.
Only in the last few decades has it been widely socially acceptable to be close friends with a member of the opposite sex. In the recent past, folks got around this bias by putting the groom's female friend with the bridesmaids and the bride's brother with the ushers. Social attitudes have now come even further. This fact is now slowly changing the gender distribution of the modern wedding party. More and more people are putting the bride's friends with her and the groom's friends with him, regardless of gender.
This trivia brought to you today by Sylvia's Hindbrain.
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