Mandatory black attire at funerals (West)
Western funerals: black is imperative - a symbol of mourning, restraint and respect for the dead.
Meaning
Target direction : Wearing black at Western funerals marks mourning, respect and the absorption of the deceased into temporary oblivion.
Interpreted meaning : Strangers in colorful garb at funerals: perceived as indifference, arrogance or contempt for the deceased.
Geography of misunderstanding
Offensive
- united-kingdom
- united-states
- france
- germany
- italy
- spain
- netherlands
- belgium
- sweden
- norway
- denmark
- finland
Neutral
- asia-east
- asia-south
Not documented
- peuples-autochtones
1. The gesture and its expected meaning
In Western Christian traditions (Catholic, Protestant, Anglican) and secular ones (France, Germany, United States), wearing black to funerals has been the quasi-obligatory norm since the 19th century. Wearing black represents a sartorial transformation: it marks the wearer's temporary forgetfulness of ordinary life, and his or her ritual integration into the mourning community. Wilson (2003) notes that black expresses "social withdrawal" - the person dressed in black signals his or her absence of levity, his or her moral integrity in the face of the mystery of death. The prescription is not written down anywhere, but it is absolute in formal settings - churches, cemeteries, mourning meals.
2. Where things go wrong: the geography of misunderstanding
Misunderstandings peak among visitors from Asia (China, Japan, India) and the Middle East, who are unfamiliar with this convention. An Asian in brightly colored garb at a British funeral provokes palpable unease: glances are cast, conversations drop, whispers are exchanged. This is interpreted as ignorance or arrogance. In France, it's more tolerant if the visitor is clearly foreign, but the level of judgment remains. In the U.S., tolerance depends heavily on the urban vs. rural context - country funerals strictly require black.
3. Historical background
The wearing of black at Western funerals emerged in the Middle Ages and was formalized in the 19th century with the Victorian Era (1837-1901). Queen Victoria wore black for 40 years after the death of Prince Albert, institutionalizing the practice. Previously, different regions had different codes - white in France in the Middle Ages, gray in Germany. The code became standardized in the 20th century with the mass media.
4. famous documented incidents
In 1997, during Princess Diana's funeral, a young Asian diplomat in colorful garb entered Westminster Cathedral. The photographs were commented on in the British media - described as a "remarkable contrast". In 2005, Chinese students at Oxford ignored the code at a professor's funeral, causing discomfort noted in expatriate memoirs. [CITATION_PRESSE_À_VÉRIFIER].
5. Practical recommendations
To do: wear strict black (suit, black dress). Consult us if in doubt about outfit. Avoid: bright colors. Jeans or casual wear. Discuss convention if perceived as obsolete - keep opinions private.
Practical recommendations
To do
- Porter noir strict (costume, robe noire). Consulter si doute sur tenue exacte. Respecter silences du deuil.
Avoid
- Ne pas porter couleurs vives. Ne pas discuter convention. Ne pas porter jeans. Ne pas décorer tenue de bijoux vifs.
Sources
- Adorned in Dreams: Fashion and Modernity
- Dress and Identity