![]() ![]() In the wedding dress chapter, Mead begins with the purchase of wedding dresses and the rituals that surround this. My two favorite chapters in this book were the chapter on wedding dresses and the chapter on the selection of an officiant. ![]() Each chapter deals with a different aspect of weddings, from bridal registries to choosing a dress, to choosing a minister, and discusses the way that these are symptomatic of particular aspects of American life in general. Instead, she posits that it is the consumer-driven nature of weddings that drives and feeds the Bridezilla phenomenon, and it is this aspect of marriage that she choses to explore in her book. Mead sets out in her prologue that she is not writing a book about Bridezillas. ![]()
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