He Can Have his Cake and We Will Eat It Too The Role of the Groom’s Cake in Southeastern Louisiana Wedding Receptions

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Cherry P. Levin

Abstract

While a small group of folklorists, anthropologists and cultural historians have explored the place of the wedding cake in cultural history, fewer have focused on the role of the groom’s cake. 


Serving two cakes at a wedding, one for the bride and one for the groom, not only suggests social and familial relationships but also conveys subtle messages about gendered roles in American society. I contend that celebratory cakes communicate important messages about gender, economic and social status, especially when considered in connection with the ritual aspects of a wedding feast.


In this paper, I place the presence of cake at weddings within a historical context. I then analyze ethnographic data derived from my investigation of over fifty southeastern Louisiana wedding receptions between 2009 and 2012. Lastly, I describe the literary origins of a regional oikotype reflected in the armadillo groom’s cake common in these wedding receptions.

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Lead Essays