HW13


For this week's blog, I discuss the cultural cues in colors.  To be specific, the colors I have chosen for this blog are the colors that symbolize Mardi Gras.  Mardi Gras is celebrated in New Orleans and the event includes a huge parade where its participants are wearing and throwing bead necklaces that are green, purple, and gold.  Though I have never witnessed the Mardi Gras festivities in person, I have been to New Orleans a couple of times and have seen some remnants from past events.  So why green, purple, and gold?  What do these colors represent?

According to the website where I also obtained the photo above, Mardi Gras is a celebration that takes place a day before Lent, which in Christianity is a time where followers give up something they like for about a month.  Each color is a symbol relating to Christianity and the culture in the south.  Green represents faith, which leans more into the religious aspect, purple represents justice, and gold represents power, meaning that celebrants have the power to choose how they celebrate the holiday.  Though Mardi Gras in itself is a Christian holiday, it has also become synonymous to partying where heavy drinking is involved (as well as other things).  Irregardless of how people celebrate Mardi Gras, it is still respected as a celebration to the history, music, and most importantly, culture in the southern United States.  Without research though, the colors would only be associated to the holiday as a whole and not for the individual meanings.

Photo Source: https://www.bustle.com/articles/140663-what-do-each-of-the-mardi-gras-colors-mean-heres-why-you-see-so-much-green

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