2muchcoffeeman
Well-Known Member
Stumbled across this on Slate this morning and thought it might made good discussion fodder, especially given the big-wedding debates here in the past. Personally, I have no idea what the rock is supposed to symbolize other than money that could have been used as a down payment on a house.
http://www.slate.com/id/2167870/
Pernicious? According to my dictionary, it means "causing insidious harm or ruin; ruinous; injurious; hurtful" and traces back to Latin words for "ruin" and "murder."
Meghan O'Rourke at Slate.com said:The retail fantasy known as a "traditional" American wedding comprises many delicious absurdities, ranging from personalized wedding stamps to ring pillows designed for dogs to favors like "Love Mints." Of all these baubles, though, perhaps the most insidious is the engagement ring. Most Americans can say no to the "celebrity garter belt" on offer for a mere $18.95 from Weddings With Class. But more than 80 percent of American brides receive a diamond engagement ring (at an average cost of around $3,200) before they get married. Few stop to think about what, beyond the misty promise of endless love, the ring might actually signify. Why would you, after all? A wedding is supposed to be a celebration. Only the uncharitable would look a sparkly diamond in the eye—never mind a man on his knee—and ask what it means.
But there's a powerful case to be made that in an age of equitable marriage the engagement ring is an outmoded commodity—starting with the obvious fact that only the woman gets one. The diamond ring is the site of retrograde fantasies about gender roles. What makes it pernicious ...
http://www.slate.com/id/2167870/
Pernicious? According to my dictionary, it means "causing insidious harm or ruin; ruinous; injurious; hurtful" and traces back to Latin words for "ruin" and "murder."