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The Mock Wedding: Folk Drama on the Saskatchewan Prairie


Article # : 18394 

Section : CULTURE
Issue Date : 9 / 1990  3,925 Words
Author : Michael Taft
Michael Taft is a free-lance folklorist and oral historian based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan. Among his books are Discovering Saskatchewan Folklore, Tall tales of British Columbia, and Blues Lyric Poetry: A Concordance. He is currently engaged in a long-term research project on mock wedding dramas in the Canadian Prairie provinces and the Plains states.

       About the same size as Texas, the province of Saskatchewan is the heartland of Canada's grain-growing region. Almost all of its population of one million lives in the southern half of the province - flat or slightly rolling country squared off into large, family-run farms and dotted with hundreds of small communities. The farmers raise wheat, barley, alfalfa, rapeseed, and other grain and seed crops, while the ranchers feed their beef cattle on the rangelands.
       
        The small towns - some containing fewer than fifty families - are strung along the rail lines, every ten miles or so, and are the business and social centers for the outlying farmers. Grain elevators - like beacons on the prairie - announce the presence of these towns to visitors before any other building is noticeable on the horizon. It is in these small towns that people from the countryside gather, whether to conduct business, attend church, watch the local hockey team, or celebrate an important social occasion.
       
        Among these occasions is the twenty-fifth wedding anniversary of a respected and well-liked couple from the community. To honor them, someone from the area - probably a close friend of the couple - gives a speech that manages to be warmhearted and sentimental while at the same time taunting and flippantly humorous. The couple, sitting among their friends, neighbors, and relatives, graciously accept both the compliments and barbs tossed out by the speaker. They know that being the center of attention at a community celebration is a responsibility as well as an honor, and they act according to the unwritten rules of sociability that everyone in their community understands.
       
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