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Wikipedia

Courtship

Courtship is the period wherein some couples get to know each other prior to a possible marriage or committed romantic, de facto relationship. Courtship traditionally may begin after a betrothal and may conclude with the celebration of marriage.[1] A courtship may be an informal and private matter between two people or may be a public affair, or a formal arrangement with family approval. Traditionally, in the case of a formal engagement, it is the role of a male to actively "court" or "woo" a female, thus encouraging her to understand him and her receptiveness to a marriage proposal.

God Speed by English artist Edmund Leighton, 1900: depicting an armored knight departing for war and leaving behind his wife or sweetheart

Courtship as a social practice is a relatively recent phenomenon, emerging only within the last few centuries. From the standpoint of anthropology and sociology, courtship is linked with other institutions such as marriage and the family which have changed rapidly, having been subject to the effects of advances in technology and medicine. As humans societies have evolved from hunter-gatherers into civilized societies, there have been substantial adjustments in relations between people, with even the remaining biological imperative that a woman and man must have sexual intercourse for human procreation to happen being bypassed by in vivo fertilisation.

History

In the past, marriages in most societies were arranged by parents and older relatives with the goal not being love but legacy and "economic stability and political alliances", according to anthropologists.[2] Accordingly, there was little need for a temporary trial period such as courtship before a permanent community-recognized union was formed between a man and a woman. While pair-bonds of varying forms were recognized by most societies as acceptable social arrangements, marriage was reserved for heterosexual pairings and had a transactional nature, where wives were in many cases a form of property being exchanged between father and husband, and who would have to serve the function of reproduction. Communities exerted pressure on people to form pair-bonds in places such as Europe; in China, society "demanded people get married before having a sexual relationship"[3] and many societies found that some formally recognized bond between a man and a woman was the best way of rearing and educating children as well as helping to avoid conflicts and misunderstandings regarding competition for mates.

 
The clandestine meeting between Romeo and Juliet in Shakespeare's play. Painting by Sir Frank Dicksee, 1884

Generally, during much of recorded history of humans in civilization, and into the Middle Ages in Europe, marriages were seen as business arrangements between families, while romance was something that happened outside of marriage discreetly, such as covert meetings.[4] The 12th-century book The Art of Courtly Love advised that "True love can have no place between husband and wife."[4] According to one view, clandestine meetings between men and women, generally outside of marriage or before marriage, were the precursors to today's courtship.[4]

From about 1700 a worldwide[citation needed] movement perhaps described as the "empowerment of the individual"[citation needed] took hold, leading towards greater emancipation of women and equality of individuals. Men and women became more equal politically, financially, and socially in many nations. In the early 20th centuries, women gradually won the right to vote starting in the first sovereign nation Norway in 1913, and to own property and receive equal treatment by the law, and these changes had profound impacts on the relationships between men and women and parental influence declined. In many societies, individuals could decide—on their own—whether they should marry, whom they should marry, and when they should marry in a "courtship ritual where young women entertained gentleman callers, usually in the home, under the watchful eye of a chaperone,"[5] but increasingly, in many Western countries, it became a self-initiated activity with two young people going out as a couple in public together. Still, courtship varies considerably by nation, custom, religious upbringing, technology, and social class, and important exceptions with regards to individual freedoms remain as many countries today still practice arranged marriages, request dowries, and forbid same-sex pairings. Although in many countries, movies, meals, and meeting in coffeehouses and other places is now popular, as are advice books suggesting various strategies for men and women,[6] in other parts of the world, such as in South Asia and many parts of the Middle East, being alone in public as a couple is not only frowned upon but can even lead to either person being socially ostracized.

The 1849 book The Whole Art of Polite Courtship; Or the Ladies & Gentlemen's Love Letter Writer exemplifies the importance of love letters in 19th century courtship with a goal of marriage.[7] The book contains 31 love letter samples for men and women in different careers, presumably for readers to draw inspiration when writing their own romantic correspondences. Etiquette books, such as the 1852 Etiquette of Courtship and Matrimony, detail socially appropriate ways to meet lovers, court, arrange a wedding, honeymoon, and avoid arguments.[8]

In the twentieth century, courtship was sometimes seen as a precursor to marriage but it could also be considered as an end-in-itself, that is, an informal social activity akin to friendship. It generally happened in that portion of a person's life before the age of marriage,[9] but as marriage became less permanent with the advent of divorce, courtship could happen at other times in peoples lives as well. People became more mobile.[10] Rapidly developing technology played a huge role: new communication technology such as the telephone,[11] Internet[12] and text messaging[13] enabled rendezvous to be arranged without face-to-face contact. Cars extended the range of courtship as well as enabled back-seat sexual exploration.

In the mid-twentieth century, the advent of birth control as well as safer procedures for abortion changed the equation considerably, and there was less pressure to marry as a means for satisfying sexual urges. New types of relationships formed; it was possible for people to live together without marrying and without children. Information about human sexuality grew, and with it an acceptance of all types of consensual sexual orientations is becoming more common. Today, the institution of courtship continues to evolve at a rapid rate with new possibilities and choices opening up particularly through online courtship.[citation needed]

Humans have been compared to other species in terms of sexual behavior. Neurobiologist Robert Sapolsky constructed a reproductive spectrum with opposite poles being tournament species, in which males compete fiercely for reproductive privileges with females, and pair bond arrangements, in which a male and female will bond for life.[14] According to Sapolsky, humans are somewhat in the middle of this spectrum, in the sense that humans form pair bonds, but there is the possibility of cheating or changing partners.[14] These species-particular behavior patterns provide a context for aspects of human reproduction, including courtship. However, one particularity of the human species is that pair bonds are often formed without necessarily having the intention of reproduction. In modern times, emphasis on the institution of marriage, traditionally described as a male-female bond, has obscured pair bonds formed by same-sex and transgender couples, and that many heterosexual couples also bond for life without offspring, or that often pairs that do have offspring separate. Thus, the concept of marriage is changing widely in many countries.

Duration

 
"Southern Courtship" by American painter Eastman Johnson (1824–1906)

The average duration of courtship varies considerably throughout the world. Furthermore, there is vast individual variation between couples. Courtship may be completely omitted, as in cases of some arranged marriages where the couple do not meet before the wedding.

In the United Kingdom, a poll of 3,000[15] engaged or married couples resulted in an average duration between first meeting and accepted proposal of marriage of 2 years and 11 months,[15][16] with the women feeling ready to accept at an average of 2 years and 7 months.[15] Regarding duration between proposal and wedding, the UK poll above gave an average of 2 years and 3 months.[16]

Traditions

Fairly casual in most European-influenced cultures, in some traditional societies, courtship is a highly structured activity with very specific formal rules.

In some societies, the parents or community propose potential partners and then allow limited courtship to determine whether the parties are suited. In Japan, there is such a type of courtship called Omiai, with similar practices called "Xiangqin" (相親) in the Greater China Area.[17] Parents will hire a matchmaker to provide pictures and résumés of potential mates, and if the couple agrees, there will be a formal meeting with the matchmaker and often parents in attendance.[17] The matchmaker and parents will often exert pressure on the couple to decide whether they want to marry after a few meetings..

Courtship in the Philippines is one complex form of courtship. Unlike other societies, it takes a far more subdued and indirect approach.[18] Its complexity involves stages, and it is considered normal for courtship to last a year or longer. It is common to see a man showing off by sending love letters and love poems, singing romantic songs, and buying gifts for a woman. The parents are also seen as part of the courtship practice, as their approval is commonly needed before courtship may begin or before the woman gives the man an answer to his advances.[18]

In more closed societies, courtship is virtually eliminated by the practice of arranged marriages[17] in which partners are chosen for young people, typically by their parents. Forbidding experimental and serial courtship and sanctioning only arranged matches is partly a means of guarding the chastity of young people and partly a matter of furthering family interests, which, in such cultures, may be considered more important than individual romantic preferences.[19]

Throughout history, courtship has often included traditions such as exchanging valentines, written correspondence (facilitated by the creation of the postal service in the nineteenth century), and similar communication-based courting.[20] Over recent decades, though, the concept of arranged marriage has changed or simply been mixed with other forms of courtship, including Eastern and Indian ones. Potential couples have the opportunity to meet and socialise with each other before deciding whether to continue the relationship.

Courtship in social theory

Courtship is used by a number of theorists to explain gendering processes and sexual identity. Scientific research into courtship began in the 1980s, after which time academic researchers started to generate theories about modern courtship practices and norms. Researchers have found that, contrary to popular beliefs, courtship is normally triggered and controlled by women,[21][22][23][24][25] driven mainly by non-verbal behaviours, to which men respond. One of the functions of romantic love is courtship.[26]

This is generally supported by other theorists who specialise in the study of body language.[27] There are some feminist scholars, however, who regard courtship as a socially constructed (and male-led) process organised to subjugate women.[28][29] Farrell reports, for example, that magazines about marriage and romantic fiction continue to attract a 98% female readership.[30] Systematic research into courtship processes inside the workplace[31] as well two ten-year studies examining norms in different international settings[32][33] continue to support a view that courtship is a social process that socialises both sexes into accepting forms of relationship that maximise the chances of successfully raising children.

Commercial courtship services

As technology has progressed, so too have the methods of courtship. In online courtship, individuals create profiles where they disclose personal information, photographs, hobbies, interests, religion and expectations. Then the user can search through hundreds of thousands of accounts and connect with multiple people at once which in return, gives the user more options and more opportunity to find what meets their standards. Online courtship has influenced the idea of choice. In Modern Romance: An Investigation, Aziz Ansari states that one third of marriages in the United States between 2005 and 2012 met through online courtship services.[34] Today there are hundreds of sites to choose from and websites designed to fit specific needs such as Match, eHarmony, OkCupid, Zoosk, and ChristianMingle. Mobile apps, such as Grindr and Tinder allow users to upload profiles that are then judged by others on the service; one can either swipe right on a profile (indicating interest) or swipe left (which presents another possible mate).

Technology

 
Map showing the most popular social media applications, by country; Facebook is dominant in 2019.

The Internet is shaping the way new generations meet; Facebook, Skype, WhatsApp, and other applications have made remote connections possible.

Online courtship tools are an alternate way to meet potential mates.[35][36] Many people use smartphone apps such as Tinder, Grindr, or Bumble which allow a user to accept or reject another user with a single swipe of a finger.[37] Some critics have suggested that matchmaking algorithms are imperfect and are "no better than chance" for the task of identifying acceptable partners.[37] Others have suggested that the speed and availability of emerging technologies may be undermining the possibility for couples to have long-term meaningful relationships when finding a replacement partner has potentially become too easy.[37]

Worldwide

 
A Japanese couple holding hands on the beach

Courtship customs and habits vary considerably throughout the world. The average duration of courtship before proceeding to engagement or marriage varies considerably throughout the world.[38]

Africa

Ethiopia

According to one source, there are four ways that marriage can happen among the Nyangatom people: (1) arranged marriage, when well-respected elders are sent to the girl's family on behalf of the boy's family; (2) courtship after a friendly meeting between boy and girl such as at a market place or holiday where there's dancing; (3) abduction, such as during a blood feud between families; (4) inheritance.[39]

North Africa

In North Africa like in many parts of the Middle East, sex without marriage is considered unacceptable. Courtship in North Africa is predominantly done under family supervision, usually in a public place.[citation needed]

Asia

Asia is a mix of traditional approaches with involvement by parents and extended families such as arranged marriages as well as modern courtship. In many cultural traditions, including some in South Asia,[40] and the Middle East[41] and to some extent East Asia, as in the case of Omiai in Japan and the similar "Xiangqin" (相親) practiced in the Greater China Area, a date may be arranged by a third party, who may be a family member, acquaintance, or professional matchmaker.

China

Patterns of courtship are changing in China, with increased modernization bumping into traditional ways.

A 2003 report in China Daily suggested that courtship for most Chinese university women was "difficult", required work, stole time away from academic advancement, and placed women in a precarious position of having to balance personal success against traditional Chinese relationships.[42] Many women were reported to have high standards for men they sought, but also worried that their academic credentials could "scare away more traditional Chinese men."[42] It was reportedly difficult finding places to have privacy, since many dormitory rooms had eight or more pupils in one suite, while courtship in restaurants tended to be expensive.[42] One student remarked: "American couples drink and dance together. But in China, we study together."[42]

Romantic love is more difficult during times of financial stress, and economic forces can encourage singles, particularly women, to select a partner primarily on financial considerations. Some men postpone marriage until their financial position is more secure and use wealth to help attract women. One trend is towards exclusive matchmaking events for the 'rich and powerful'; for example, an annual June event in Wuhan with expensive entry-ticket prices for men (99,999 RMB) lets financially secure men choose so-called bikini brides based on their beauty and education, and the financial exclusivity of the event was criticized by the official news outlet China Daily.[43] Surveys though from 2015 to 2018 suggest that the majority of Chinese respondents (especially college students) would place the character and personality of their partners above material assets,[44][45][46][47][48] with also increasing acceptance towards evenly splitting bills or going Dutch.[49][50][51]

There have been conflicting reports on expatriate courtship in China's capital city. One account in 2006 suggested the courtship scene in Beijing to be "sad" with particular difficulties for foreign women hoping to find romance.[52] It was reportedly due to the cold, uninterested, or unappealing attitudes of the male expats and the shyness and cultural differences of the Chinese men,[52] and another account in 2010 documented similar, if slightly improved results.[53] A different report in 2010, though, suggested that some Chinese men preferred Western women, viewing them as less girlish and materialistic, and also more independent and straightforward than Chinese women.[54] A 2016 survey of Chinese students abroad, however, imply there have been significant barriers to foreign courtship,[55] and the intermarriage rate of Chinese women in Shanghai has been decreasing.[56]

A new format of Internet "QQ" chat rooms is gaining ground against so-called "traditional courtship agencies" in Changsha (Hunan Province); the QQ rooms have 20,000 members, and service is much less expensive than courtship agencies which can charge 100 to 200 yuan ($13 to US$26) per introduction.[57] Internet courtship, with computer-assisted matchmaking, is becoming more prevalent; one site supposedly has 23 million registered users.[58] Speed dating has come to Shanghai and other cities.[59][60] Worldwide online matchmakers have explored entering the Chinese market via partnerships or acquisitions.[61]

Each year, November 11 has become an unofficial holiday[62] known as China's Singles' Day when singles are encouraged to make an extra effort to find a partner.[63] Worried parents of unmarried children often arrange dates for their offspring on this day as well as others.[63] Before the day approaches, thousands of college students and young workers post messages describing their plans for this day. In Arabic numerals, the day looks like "1111", that is, "like four single people standing together", and there was speculation that it originated in the late 1990s when college students celebrated being single with "a little self-mockery"[62] but a differing explanation dates it back to events in the Roman Empire.[62] For many, Singles' Day offers people a way to "demonstrate their stance on love and marriage".[62] In 2005, a government-sponsored agency called Shanghai Women's Activities Centre (Chinese: Jinguoyuan) organized periodic matchmaking events often attended by parents.[64]

There has been concern that young people's views of marriage have changed because of economic opportunities, with many choosing deliberately not to get married,[62] as well as young marrieds who have decided not to have children, or to postpone having them.[63] Cohabiting relationships are tolerated more often.[3] Communities where people live but do not know each other well are becoming more common in China like elsewhere, leading to fewer opportunities to meet somebody locally without assistance.[63] Divorce rates are rising in cities such as Shanghai, which recorded 27,376 divorces in 2004, an increase of 30% from 2003.[63]

Relationships between students preparing for college are frowned upon by many parents in China. There was a report that sexual relations among middle schoolers in Guangzhou sometimes resulted in abortions.[65] There have been reports of scams involving get-rich-quick schemes; a forty-year-old migrant worker was one of a thousand seduced by an advertisement which read "Rich woman willing to pay 3 million yuan for sperm donor" but the worker was cheated out of his savings of 190,000 yuan (US$27,500).[66]

The game show If You Are the One, titled after Chinese personal ads, featured some provocative contestants making sexual allusions and the show reportedly ran afoul of authorities and had to change its approach.[67] The two-host format involves a panel of 24 single women questioning a man to decide if he'll remain on the show; if he survives, he can choose a girl to date; the show gained notoriety for controversial remarks and opinions such as model Ma Nuo saying she prefer to "weep in a BMW than laugh on a bike", who was later banned from making appearances.[68]

India

Indian courtship is heavily influenced by the custom of arranged marriages which require little courtship, although there are strong indications that the institution is undergoing change, and that love marriages are becoming more accepted as India becomes more intertwined with the rest of the world. In the cities at least, it is becoming more accepted for two people to meet and try to find if there is compatibility.[69]

 
An Indian wedding

The majority of Indian marriages are arranged by parents and relatives, and one estimate is that 7 of every 10 marriages are arranged.[70] Sometimes the bride and groom don't meet until the wedding, and there is no courtship or wooing before the joining.[38] In the past, it meant that couples were chosen from the same caste and religion and economic status.[71] There is widespread support for arranged marriages generally. Writer Lavina Melwani described a happy marriage which had been arranged by the bride's father, and noted that during the engagement, the woman was allowed to go out with him before they were married on only one occasion; the couple married and found happiness.[72] Supporters of arranged marriage suggest that there is a risk of having the marriage fall apart whether it was arranged by relatives or by the couple themselves, and that what's important is not how the marriage came to be but what the couple does after being married.[72] Parents and relatives exert considerable influence, sometimes posting matrimonial ads in newspapers and online.[71] Customs encourage families to put people together, and discourage sexual experimentation as well as so-called serial courtship in which a prospective bride or groom meets but continually rejects possible partners, since the interests of the family are seen as more important than the romantic needs of the people marrying.[73] Indian writers, such as Mistry in his book Family Matters, sometimes depict arranged marriages as unhappy.[74] Writer Sarita Sarvate of India Currents thinks people calculate their "value" on the "Indian marriage market" according to measures such as family status, and that arranged marriages typically united spouses who often didn't love each other.[75] She suggested love was out of place in this world because it risked passion and "sordid" sexual liaisons.[75] Love, as she sees it, is "Waking up in the morning and thinking about someone."[75] Writer Jennifer Marshall described the wife in an arranged marriage as living in a world of solitude without much happiness, and feeling pressured by relatives to conceive a son so she wouldn't be considered as "barren" by her husband's family; in this sense, the arranged marriage didn't bring "love, happiness, and companionship."[76] Writer Vijaysree Venkatraman believes arranged marriages are unlikely to disappear soon, commenting in his book review of Shoba Narayan's Monsoon Diary, which has a detailed description of the steps involved in a present-day arranged marriage.[77] There are indications that even the institution of arranged marriages is changing, with marriages increasingly being arranged by "unknown, unfamiliar sources" and less based on local families who know each other.[70] Writer Lavina Melwani in Little India compared Indian marriages to business deals:

Until recently, Indian marriages had all the trappings of a business transaction involving two deal-making families, a hardboiled matchmaker and a vocal board of shareholders – concerned uncles and aunts. The couple was almost incidental to the deal. They just dressed and showed up for the wedding ceremony. And after that the onus was on them to adjust to the 1,001 relatives, get to know each other and make the marriage work.

— Lavina Melwani, [71]

Relationships in which courtship is undertaken by two people without parental involvement and sometimes carry on clandestine get-togethers, has become increasingly common. When this leads to a wedding, the resulting unions are sometimes called love marriages. There are increasing instances when couples initiate contact on their own, particularly if they live in a foreign country; in one case, a couple met surreptitiously over a game of cards.[71] Indians who move abroad to Britain or America often follow the cultural patterns of their new country: for example, one Indian woman met a white American man while skiing, and married him, and the formerly "all-important relatives" were reduced to bystanders trying to influence things ineffectively.[71] Factors operating worldwide, such as increased affluence, the need for longer education, and greater mobility have lessened the appeal for arranged marriages, and these trends have affected criteria about which possible partners are acceptable, making it more likely that pairings will cross previously impenetrable barriers such as caste or ethnic background.[71] Indian Americans in the U.S. sometimes participate in Singles Meets organized by websites which happen about once a month, with 100 participants at each event; an organizer did not have firm statistics about the success rate leading to a long-term relationship but estimated about one in every ten members finds a partner through the site.[78]

Courtship websites are gaining ground in India. Writer Rupa Dev preferred websites which emphasized authenticity and screened people before entering their names into their databases, making it a safer environment overall, so that site users can have greater trust that it is safe to meet others on the site.[79] Dev suggested that such websites were much better than the anonymous chatrooms of the 1990s.[79]

During the interval before marriage, whether it is an arranged or a love marriage, private detectives have been hired to check up on a prospective bride or groom, or to verify claims about a potential spouse made in newspaper advertising, and there are reports that such snooping is increasing.[70] Detectives investigate former amorous relationships and can include fellow college students, former police officers skilled in investigations, and medical workers "with access to health records."[70]

Transsexuals and eunuchs have begun using Internet services in some states in India.[80]

The practice of courtship runs against some religious traditions, and one particular Hindu group Sri Ram Sena threatened to "force unwed couples" to marry, if they were discovered courtship on Valentine's Day; a fundamentalist leader said "drinking and dancing in bars and celebrating this day has nothing to do with Hindu traditions."[81] The threat sparked a protest via the Internet which resulted in cartloads of pink panties being sent to the fundamentalist leader's office.[81] as part of the Pink Chaddi Campaign (Pink Underwear/Panties Campaign). Another group, Akhil Bharatiya Hindu Mahasabha, threatened to do the same, for which it was severely mocked online[82] and on the day after Valentine's Day, had protesters outside its Delhi headquarters, with people (mockingly) complaining that it did not fulfill its "promise",[83] with some having come with materials for the wedding rituals.

In India, parents sometimes participate in websites designed to match couples,[84] with some offering to organize double or group socialising.[85]

Japan

There is a type of courtship called Omiai in which parents hire a matchmaker to give resumes and pictures to potential mates for their approval, leading to a formal meeting with parents and matchmaker attending.[86] If the couple has a few rendezvous, they're often pressured by the matchmaker and parents to decide whether or not to marry.[86]

Korea

The reasons for courtship in Korea are various. Research conducted by Saegye Daily showed that teenagers choose to keep company for reasons such as "to become more mature," "to gain consultation on worries, or troubles," or "to learn the difference between boys and girls," etc.[87] Similarly, a news report in MK Daily showed that the primary reasons for courtship for workers of around ages 20–30 are "emotional stability," "marriage," "someone to spend time with," etc.[88] An interesting feature in the reasons for courtship in Korea is that many Koreans are somewhat motivated to find a partner due to the societal pressure that often views single persons as incompetent.[89]

Present Korean courtship shows a changing attitude due to the influence of tradition and modernization. There are a lot of Confucian ideas and practices that still saturate South Korean culture and daily life as traditional values.[90] Patriarchy in Korea has been grounded on Confucian culture that postulated hierarchical social orders according to age and sex.[91] Patriarchy is "a system of social structure and practices in which men dominate, oppress and exploit women” which is well reflected in the ways of courtship in Korea.[92][full citation needed] Adding to it, there is an old saying that says a boy and a girl should not sit together after they have reached the age of seven. It is one of the old teachings of Confucianism[93] and reveals its inclination toward conservatism.

Most Koreans tend to regard courtship as a precursor to marriage. According to a survey conducted by Gyeonggi-do Family Women's Researcher on people of age 26–44, 85.7% of respondents replied as ‘willing to get married’. The market for marriage agencies are growing continuously.[94] DUO and Gayeon are one of the major marriage agencies in Korea. Also, "Mat-sun", the blind date which is usually based on the premise of marriage, is held often among ages of late 20s to 30s.[95] But the late trend is leaning towards the separation between courtship and marriage unlike the conservative ways of the past.[96] In the survey conducted by a marriage agency, of 300 single males and females who were asked of their opinions on marrying their lovers, about only 42% of the males and 39% of the females said yes.[97] There are also cases of courtship without the premise of marriage. However, the majority still takes getting into a relationship seriously.

Courtship in Korea is also considered a necessary activity supported by society.[89] Korean adults are constantly questioned whether or not they are courting by the people around them.[89] During family gatherings on holidays one of the questions that people hate getting asked the most is related to marriage.[98] According to a survey it was the highest ranked at 47.3 percent.[98]

College students in their sophomore to junior year who have not been in a relationship feel anxious that they are falling behind amongst their peers. Most of them try "sogaeting", going out on a blind date, for the first time to get into a relationship. Courtship is a duty that most people feel they must take on to not seem incompetent.[99] In recent trends, even dramas such as “”Shining Romance” (“빛나는 로맨스”), and “Jang Bo-ri is Here!” (“왔다 장보리”), and in a variety show called, “Dad! Where Are We Going?” (“아빠 어디가?”) there are elementary children confessing their love.

courtship has also been depicted to be an activity of fun and happiness. There are Korean TV programs that film celebrities together as married couples supporting this depiction of courtship such as “We Got Married” (“우리 결혼했어요”), “With You” (“님과 함께”) and “The Man Who Gets Married Daily” (“매일 결혼 하는 남자.”)[99]

According to a survey by wedding consulting agency, men consider a physical relation as a catalyst of love, otherwise, women regard it as a confirmation of affection. Adding to it, both 79.2% of men and 71.0% of women stated that how deep their physical relation in courtship is concerned in the decision of whether to marry.[100]

Pakistan

Marriages and courtship in Pakistan are influenced by traditional cultural practices similar to those elsewhere in the Indian subcontinent as well as Muslim norms and manners. Illegitimate relationships before marriage are considered a social taboo and social interaction between unmarried men and women is encouraged at a modest and healthy level. Couples are usually wedded through either an arranged marriage or love marriage. Love marriages are those in which the individuals have chosen a partner whom they like by their own choice prior to marriage, and usually occur with the consent of parents and family. Arranged marriages on the other hand are marriages which are set and agreed by the families or guardians of the two individuals where the couple may not have met before. In either cases and in consistency with traditional marital practices, individuals who marry are persuaded to meet and talk to each other for some time before considering marrying so that they can check their compatibility.

Singapore

Singapore's largest courtship service, SDU, Social Development Unit, is government-run. The original SDU, which controversially promoted marriages among university graduate singles, no longer exists today. On 28 January 2009, it was merged with SDS [Social Development Services], which just as controversially promoted marriages among non-graduate singles. The merged unit, SDN seeks to promote meaningful relationships, with marriage touted as a top life goal, among all resident [Singapore] singles within a conducive network environment of singles, relevant commercial and public entities.

Taiwan

Survey of Taiwan students
Statement Agree
Hopeful they'll find a relationship 37%
Have no clear idea how to approach someone who interested them 90%
"Changes of heart" and "cheating" cause breakups 60%
Willing to resume relationship if problems are resolved 31%
Having more than one relationship at a time isn't good 70%
Women who won't enter a relationship if man lives too far away 70%
Women who believe height in men matters 96%
....source: China Daily[101]

One report suggested that in southern Taiwan, "traditional rules of courtship" still apply despite the influence of popular culture; for example, men continue to take the initiative in forming relationships.[101] A poll in 2009 of students at high schools and vocational schools found that over 90% admitted that they had "no clear idea of how to approach someone of the opposite sex who interested them". What caused relationships to break up? 60% said "changes of heart" or "cheating". Courtship with more than one person at a time was not permissible, agreed 70%.

Iran

People of different sexes are not allowed to "mix freely" in public.[102] Since 1979, the state has become a religious autocracy, and imposes Islamic edicts on matters such as courtship. Clerics run officially sanctioned internet courtship agencies with strict rules.[102] Prospective couples can have three meetings: two with strict supervision inside the center, and the third being a "brief encounter on their own"; afterwards, they can either (1) choose to marry or (2) agree to never see each other again.[102] This has become the subject of a film by Iranian filmmaker Leila Lak.[102] Iran has a large population of young people with 70 percent of the 83-million population being under the age of thirty.[103] However, economic hardship discourages marriage, and divorce rates have increased in Tehran to around a quarter of marriages,[103] even though divorce is taboo.[103] While the Iranian government "condemns courtship and relationships", it promotes marriage with (1) online courses (2) "courtship classes" where students can "earn a diploma" after sitting through weekly tests and "hundreds of hours of education" (3) "marriage diplomas" (4) matchmaking and arranged marriages.[103] Authorities push a conservative approach and shun unmarried romantic relationships and encourage "traditional match-making".[103] But young people have disobeyed the restrictions; one said "It is wiser to have different relationships" and believed in defying religious rules which suggest "short-term illegitimate relationships harm dignity."[103] Adultery can be punished by death.[103] While youths can flout selected restrictions, there are almost no instances in which unmarried people move in together.[103] There have been efforts to promote Sigheh (temporary marriage).[103]

Israel

In Israel, in the secular community, courtship is very common amongst both heterosexual and homosexual couples. However, because of the religious community, there are some religious exceptions to the courtship process. In the Haredi and Chasidic communities (Ultra-Orthodox Judaism) most couples are paired through a matchmaker.

Lebanon

One report suggests courtship is hampered by "the weight of family demands upon individual choice" and that there were difficulties, particularly for people seeking to marry across religious lines, such as a Christian seeking to marry a Muslim.[104]

Saudi Arabia

The Saudi Gazette quoted a Wikipedia article on domestic violence, suggesting it was an issue for Saudis, including abusive behavior while courting by one or both partners.[105]

North America

United States

One report suggested the United States as well as other western-oriented countries were different from the rest of the world because "love is the reason for mating," as opposed to marriages being arranged to cement economic and class ties between families and promote political stability.[2] Courtship–known there as 'dating'–by mutual consent of two single people, is the norm. British writer Kira Cochrane, after moving to the U.S., found herself grappling with the American approach to courtship.[106] She wondered why it was acceptable to juggle "10 potential partners" while weighing different attributes; she found American-style dating to be "exhausting and strange."[106] She found courtship in America to be "organized in a fairly formal fashion" with men approaching women and asking point blank for a date; she found this to be "awkward."[106] She described the "third date rule" which was that women weren't supposed to have sex until the third date even if they desired it, although men were supposed to try for sex.[107] She wrote: "Dating rules almost always cast the man as aggressor, and the woman as prey, which frankly makes me feel nauseous."[107] Canadian writer Danielle Crittenden, however, chronicling female angst, criticized a tendency not to take courtship seriously and suggested that postponing marriage into one's thirties was problematic:[108]

By waiting and waiting and waiting to commit to someone, our capacity for love shrinks and withers. This doesn't mean that women or men should marry the first reasonable person to come along, or someone with whom they are not in love. But we should, at a much earlier age than we do now, take a serious attitude toward dating and begin preparing ourselves to settle down. For it's in the act of taking up the roles we've been taught to avoid or postpone––wife, husband, mother, father––that we build our identities, expand our lives, and achieve the fullness of character we desire.

— Danielle Crittenden, 1999, [108]

Journalist Emily Witt in 2016 wrote that while "social mores had changed to accept a wider range of sexual practices", there was still much "loneliness and anxiety".[109] She traveled to San Francisco and began dating a lot, using Internet dating services and apps, and sometimes going to singles' bars alone, only to find that the "romantic-comedy concept of love" with a "perfect, permanent, tea-for-two ending" was not going to happen to her.[109]

There is evidence that couples differ in the pace and timing with which they initiate sex in their relationships. Studies show that approximately 50% of premarital young adult couples become sexually involved within the first month of dating, while 25% initiate sex one to three months after beginning to date and a small proportion of couples wait until marriage before initiating sexual relations.[110]

Teenagers and college-aged students tend to avoid the more formal activity of dating, and prefer casual no-strings-attached experiments sometimes described as 'hookups'. It permits young women to "go out and fit into the social scene, get attention from young men, and learn about sexuality", according to one report by sociologists.[111] The term hookup can describe a wide variety of behavior ranging from kissing to non-genital touching; according to one report, only about one third of people had sexual intercourse.[111] A contrary report, however, suggested there has been no "sea change" in sexual behavior regarding college students from 1988 onwards, and that the term hookup itself continued to be used to describe a variety of relationships, including merely socializing or passionate kissing as well as sexual intercourse.[112]

Muslims living in the United States can choose whether to use traditional Islamic methods, or date American-style; Muslims choosing to stick to Islamic tradition can "only marry another Muslim", according to one Malaysian account. Mosques have been known to try to bring people together––one in California has a dating service for Muslims.[113]

Europe

United Kingdom

 
Flirting, aristocratic-style
Painting by Frédéric Soulacroix (1858–1933)

In Britain, if two people are 'going out together' their relationship has normally advanced to a relatively long-standing and sexual boyfriend-girlfriend relationship although they're not cohabiting. Writer Kira Cochrane advises to "get out there and meet people" while noting a trend of temporary suspension of marriage until an individual reaches his or her thirties.[114] She sees a trend for developing new ways of meeting people.[114] In contrast, writer Bibi van der Zee found etiquette rules to be helpful, and found that supposedly liberated advice such as "just be yourself" to be the "most useless advice in history."[115] She expresses frustration following fruitless sexual relationships, and that her mid twenties saw relationships with partners who were less willing to return phone calls or display interest in long-term commitment. She felt "clueless and unwanted", she wrote, and found advice books such as The Rules helpful.[116] British writer Henry Castiglione signed up for a "weekend flirting course" and found the experience helpful; he was advised to talk to and smile at everyone he met.[117] Emailing back-and-forth, after meeting on a website, is one way to get to know people in Britain, and elsewhere.[118]

In the UK, one estimate from 2009 was that 15 million people are single, and half of these are seeking a long-term relationship; three-quarters of them have not been in a relationship for more than 18 months.[119] A Pew study in 2005 which examined Internet users in long-term relationships including marriage, found that many met by contacts at work or at school.[120]In a twelve-month period, the average number of assignations that a single person will have is four.[119] When courting, 43% of people 'google' potential partners ahead of time.[121] Almost five million Britons used websites in the past twelve months.[119] A third admitting to lying on their profile.[119] A fifth of married individuals between 19 and 25 met their spouse online.[119] One poll in 2009 of 3,000 couples suggested that the average duration of their courtship period, between first meeting to the acceptance of a marriage proposal, was three years.[122] In 2017 Britain online fraud victim numbers were at record high. According to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau, there were 3,889 victims of so-called romance fraud in 2016.[123] who handed over a record £39m. Online safety in the UK is a concern for authorities and individuals.

German-speaking countries

 
Ball of City of Vienna (1900)

While analysts such as Harald Martenstein and others suggest that it is easier for persons to initiate contact in America, many Germans view the American dating habits as "unspontaneous", "ridiculous" and "rigid".[citation needed] Until the 1960s, countries such as Germany, Switzerland and Austria had a more formal approach for first contacts that was eased during seasonal festivals like carnival and festivals and funfairs like the Oktoberfest, which allowed for more casual flirts.[124]

Membership in voluntary associations is relatively high in German-speaking countries and these provided further chances for possible partners to meet. Strolling on Esplanades and Promenade walkways such as the one in Hamburg called the Jungfernstieg (maidens way), have been another venue for introductions as early as the 19th century. Analyst Geoffrey Gorer described 'dating' as an American idiosyncrasy focusing on youth of college age and expressed in activities such as American 'proms'. In contrast German speaking countries and the longstanding musical tradition there provided ample opportunity of persons of varying ages enjoying social dances, such as the Vienna Opera Ball and other occasions.

Romantic encounters were often described with French terms like rendezvous or tête-à-tête. The German term of Stelldichein (as translated by Joachim Heinrich Campes) is used to signify courtship when the age of consent to marriage was relatively high. German traditions to signify lovers who met in hiding were described with terms like Fensterln (windowing) or Kiltgang (dawn stroll) used in Bavaria and Switzerland.[125] Analyst Sebastian Heinzel sees a major cultural divide between American courtship habits and European informality, and leads to instances in which European expatriates in cities such as New York keep to themselves.[126]

Today, most German couples in long-term relationships get to know each other through mutual friends, at work or while going out at night; the first few months of courtship often involve sexual intercourse, but are still rather casual and do not imply a serious wish to get married.[127]

Italy

Italians maintain a conservative approach to courtship. Also, inviting friends or relatives during a rendezvous is not uncommon. More modern approaches such as 'blind dates,' 'speed dating' and websites are not as popular as abroad, and are not considered very effective by the majority of the population.[citation needed]

Spain

One report suggested Spanish women were the "greatest flirts", based on an unofficial study which ranked countries based on initiations of contact.[128]

Oceania

Australia

A recent study revealed that 50% of Australians agreed it was permissible to request to 'go out' via a text message but not acceptable to break up this way.[13] Flirting while texting, dubbed flirtext, was more likely to be done by girls after a relationship was started.[13] A survey of newspaper readers suggested it was time to abandon the "old fashioned rule" of men paying for the first outing, based on women's greater earning capacity.[129]

South America

Brazil

In Brazil there is a longer time interval before children move out of the house, which affects courtship.[130] As a result, parents offer advice about courtship although it may not be heeded.[130]

LGBT+

 
A same-sex male couple holding hands on the street

Courtship behavior of non-heterosexual individuals doesn't always reflect their self-ascribed sexual orientation. Some of them recognized from early age that they're attracted to the same sex or both/all sexes, but may initially adhere to heterosexual norms in their courtship behaviors. Some individuals who identify as LGBT+ in one way or another but are questioning or haven't come out to their peers and family may wait years before they start courting their preferred sex.[131]

According to a Psychology Today report, men who identify as homosexual recognize their same-sex attraction in their late teens or early twenties, and they tend to care more about physical attractiveness than the status of a prospective partner.[132] Men who identify as homosexual, on average, tend to have more sexual partners, while women who identify as lesbian tend to form steadier one-on-one relationships, and tend to be less promiscuous than heterosexual women.[132][dubious ]

In India, transgender individuals and eunuchs have used internet dating to help them find partners, but there continue to be strong societal pressures which marginalize them.[80]

Matchmakers

 
The Matchmaker
painting by Gerard van Honthorst (1590–1656)

People can meet other people on their own or the get-together can be arranged by someone else. Matchmaking is an art based entirely on hunches, since it is impossible to predict with certainty whether two people will like each other or not. "All you should ever try and do is make two people be in the same room at the same time," advised matchmaker Sarah Beeny in 2009, and the only rule is to make sure the people involved want to be set up.[133] One matchmaker advised it was good to match "brains as well as beauty" and try to find people with similar religious and political viewpoints and thinks that like-minded people result in more matches, although acknowledging that opposites sometimes attract.[134] It is easier to put several people together at the same time, so there are other candidates possible if one doesn't work out.[134] And, after introducing people, don't meddle.[134]

Friends as matchmakers

Friends remain a common way for people to meet.[135] However, the Internet promises to overtake friends in the future, if present trends continue.[136][135] A friend can introduce two people who do not know each other, and the friend may play matchmaker and send them on a blind date.

Family as matchmakers

Parents, via their contacts with associates or neighbors or friends, can introduce their children to each other. In India, parents often place matrimonial ads in newspapers or online, and may post the resumes of the prospective bride or groom.[137]

Matchmaking systems and services

Matchmaking systems can be systematic and organized ways to improve matchmaking by using rules or technology. The meeting can be in-person or live as well as separated by time or space such as by telephone or email or chat-based. The purpose of the meeting is for the two persons to decide whether to go out together in the future.

See also

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  135. ^ a b Sharon Jayson (2010-02-10). "Internet changing the game of love". USA Today. Retrieved 2010-12-08. Meeting through friends was also commonly cited by those in the 1992 National Health and Social Life Survey, co-directed by sociologist Edward Laumann of the University of Chicago. That survey questioned 3,300 adults ages 18 to 59....
  136. ^ Sharon Jayson (2010-02-10). "Internet changing the game of love". USA Today. Retrieved 2010-12-08. People who met 20, 25 or 30 years ago were more likely to mention co-workers," he says, and people who met in the past 10 years "were less likely to mention co-workers.
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Further reading

  • Moira Weigel (2016). Labor of Love: The Invention of Dating. Farrar, Straus and Giroux. ISBN 978-0374182533.

External links

  • "Sea Turtle Reproduction". BioExpedition. 2015.
  • Okuayama, J.; Kagawa, S.; Arai, N. (2014). "Random Mate Searching: Male Sea Turtle Targets Juvenile for Mating Behavior". Chelonian Conservation and Biology. 13 (2): 278–282. doi:10.2744/CCB-1086.1. S2CID 86574012.
  • Stewart, K. R.; Dutton, P. H. (2014). "Breeding Sex Rations in Adult Leatherback Turtles (Dermochelys coriacea) May compensate for Female-Biased hatchling Sex Rations". PLOS ONE. 9 (2): 1–5. Bibcode:2014PLoSO...988138S. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0088138. PMC 3913748. PMID 24505403.
  • Stevenson-Hamilton, J (1912) Animal Life in Africa. New York: E. P. Dutton and Company.
  • Barklow, W. (2004). "Amphibious communication with sound in Hippopotamus amphibius". Animal Behaviour. 68 (5): 1125–1132. doi:10.1016/j.anbehav.2003.10.034. S2CID 53146581.
  • Mason, k. 2013. "Hippopotamus amphibius", Animal Diversity Web. Accessed 8 December 2015.
  • Klingel, H. (1995). "Fluctuating fortunes of the river horse. (Cover story)". Natural History. 104 (5): 46.
  • Sandigeo Zoo library (2001). Hippopotamus, Hippopotamus amphibious, & Pygmy Hippopotamus, Cheoropsis liberiensis. Revised 2011. 8 December 2015.
  • Fletscher, D. J. C.; Tribe, G. D. Natural emergency queen rearing by apis mellifera adansonii ii. In African Bees: Taxonomy, Biology and Economic Use; Fletscher, D. J. C., Ed.; Apimondia: Pretoria, South Africa, 1977; pp. 132–140.
  • Heidinger, Ina Monika Margret; et al. (2014). "Factors Influencing the Duration and Frequency of Nuptial Flights". Insects. 5 (3): 513–527. doi:10.3390/insects5030513. PMC 4592583. PMID 26462822.
  • Sabar, Nassar; Ayob, Masri; Kendall, Graham; Qu, Rong (2012). "A honey-bee mating optimization algorithm for educational timetabling problems;". European Journal of Operational Research. 216 (3): 533–543. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.298.7164. doi:10.1016/j.ejor.2011.08.006.
  • Neumann, Peter; Moritz, Robin F. A.; Praagh, Jobvan (1999). "Queen mating frequency in different types of honey bee mating apiaries". Journal of Apicultural Research. 38 (1–2): 11–18. doi:10.1080/00218839.1999.11100990.

courtship, other, uses, disambiguation, period, wherein, some, couples, know, each, other, prior, possible, marriage, committed, romantic, facto, relationship, traditionally, begin, after, betrothal, conclude, with, celebration, marriage, courtship, informal, . For other uses see Courtship disambiguation Courtship is the period wherein some couples get to know each other prior to a possible marriage or committed romantic de facto relationship Courtship traditionally may begin after a betrothal and may conclude with the celebration of marriage 1 A courtship may be an informal and private matter between two people or may be a public affair or a formal arrangement with family approval Traditionally in the case of a formal engagement it is the role of a male to actively court or woo a female thus encouraging her to understand him and her receptiveness to a marriage proposal God Speed by English artist Edmund Leighton 1900 depicting an armored knight departing for war and leaving behind his wife or sweetheart Courtship as a social practice is a relatively recent phenomenon emerging only within the last few centuries From the standpoint of anthropology and sociology courtship is linked with other institutions such as marriage and the family which have changed rapidly having been subject to the effects of advances in technology and medicine As humans societies have evolved from hunter gatherers into civilized societies there have been substantial adjustments in relations between people with even the remaining biological imperative that a woman and man must have sexual intercourse for human procreation to happen being bypassed by in vivo fertilisation Contents 1 History 2 Duration 3 Traditions 4 Courtship in social theory 4 1 Commercial courtship services 4 2 Technology 5 Worldwide 5 1 Africa 5 1 1 Ethiopia 5 1 2 North Africa 5 2 Asia 5 2 1 China 5 2 2 India 5 2 3 Japan 5 2 4 Korea 5 2 5 Pakistan 5 2 6 Singapore 5 2 7 Taiwan 5 2 8 Iran 5 2 9 Israel 5 2 10 Lebanon 5 2 11 Saudi Arabia 5 3 North America 5 3 1 United States 5 4 Europe 5 4 1 United Kingdom 5 4 2 German speaking countries 5 4 3 Italy 5 4 4 Spain 5 5 Oceania 5 5 1 Australia 5 6 South America 5 6 1 Brazil 6 LGBT 7 Matchmakers 7 1 Friends as matchmakers 7 2 Family as matchmakers 7 3 Matchmaking systems and services 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksHistory EditIn the past marriages in most societies were arranged by parents and older relatives with the goal not being love but legacy and economic stability and political alliances according to anthropologists 2 Accordingly there was little need for a temporary trial period such as courtship before a permanent community recognized union was formed between a man and a woman While pair bonds of varying forms were recognized by most societies as acceptable social arrangements marriage was reserved for heterosexual pairings and had a transactional nature where wives were in many cases a form of property being exchanged between father and husband and who would have to serve the function of reproduction Communities exerted pressure on people to form pair bonds in places such as Europe in China society demanded people get married before having a sexual relationship 3 and many societies found that some formally recognized bond between a man and a woman was the best way of rearing and educating children as well as helping to avoid conflicts and misunderstandings regarding competition for mates The clandestine meeting between Romeo and Juliet in Shakespeare s play Painting by Sir Frank Dicksee 1884 Generally during much of recorded history of humans in civilization and into the Middle Ages in Europe marriages were seen as business arrangements between families while romance was something that happened outside of marriage discreetly such as covert meetings 4 The 12th century book The Art of Courtly Love advised that True love can have no place between husband and wife 4 According to one view clandestine meetings between men and women generally outside of marriage or before marriage were the precursors to today s courtship 4 From about 1700 a worldwide citation needed movement perhaps described as the empowerment of the individual citation needed took hold leading towards greater emancipation of women and equality of individuals Men and women became more equal politically financially and socially in many nations In the early 20th centuries women gradually won the right to vote starting in the first sovereign nation Norway in 1913 and to own property and receive equal treatment by the law and these changes had profound impacts on the relationships between men and women and parental influence declined In many societies individuals could decide on their own whether they should marry whom they should marry and when they should marry in a courtship ritual where young women entertained gentleman callers usually in the home under the watchful eye of a chaperone 5 but increasingly in many Western countries it became a self initiated activity with two young people going out as a couple in public together Still courtship varies considerably by nation custom religious upbringing technology and social class and important exceptions with regards to individual freedoms remain as many countries today still practice arranged marriages request dowries and forbid same sex pairings Although in many countries movies meals and meeting in coffeehouses and other places is now popular as are advice books suggesting various strategies for men and women 6 in other parts of the world such as in South Asia and many parts of the Middle East being alone in public as a couple is not only frowned upon but can even lead to either person being socially ostracized The 1849 book The Whole Art of Polite Courtship Or the Ladies amp Gentlemen s Love Letter Writer exemplifies the importance of love letters in 19th century courtship with a goal of marriage 7 The book contains 31 love letter samples for men and women in different careers presumably for readers to draw inspiration when writing their own romantic correspondences Etiquette books such as the 1852 Etiquette of Courtship and Matrimony detail socially appropriate ways to meet lovers court arrange a wedding honeymoon and avoid arguments 8 In the twentieth century courtship was sometimes seen as a precursor to marriage but it could also be considered as an end in itself that is an informal social activity akin to friendship It generally happened in that portion of a person s life before the age of marriage 9 but as marriage became less permanent with the advent of divorce courtship could happen at other times in peoples lives as well People became more mobile 10 Rapidly developing technology played a huge role new communication technology such as the telephone 11 Internet 12 and text messaging 13 enabled rendezvous to be arranged without face to face contact Cars extended the range of courtship as well as enabled back seat sexual exploration In the mid twentieth century the advent of birth control as well as safer procedures for abortion changed the equation considerably and there was less pressure to marry as a means for satisfying sexual urges New types of relationships formed it was possible for people to live together without marrying and without children Information about human sexuality grew and with it an acceptance of all types of consensual sexual orientations is becoming more common Today the institution of courtship continues to evolve at a rapid rate with new possibilities and choices opening up particularly through online courtship citation needed Humans have been compared to other species in terms of sexual behavior Neurobiologist Robert Sapolsky constructed a reproductive spectrum with opposite poles being tournament species in which males compete fiercely for reproductive privileges with females and pair bond arrangements in which a male and female will bond for life 14 According to Sapolsky humans are somewhat in the middle of this spectrum in the sense that humans form pair bonds but there is the possibility of cheating or changing partners 14 These species particular behavior patterns provide a context for aspects of human reproduction including courtship However one particularity of the human species is that pair bonds are often formed without necessarily having the intention of reproduction In modern times emphasis on the institution of marriage traditionally described as a male female bond has obscured pair bonds formed by same sex and transgender couples and that many heterosexual couples also bond for life without offspring or that often pairs that do have offspring separate Thus the concept of marriage is changing widely in many countries Duration Edit Southern Courtship by American painter Eastman Johnson 1824 1906 The average duration of courtship varies considerably throughout the world Furthermore there is vast individual variation between couples Courtship may be completely omitted as in cases of some arranged marriages where the couple do not meet before the wedding In the United Kingdom a poll of 3 000 15 engaged or married couples resulted in an average duration between first meeting and accepted proposal of marriage of 2 years and 11 months 15 16 with the women feeling ready to accept at an average of 2 years and 7 months 15 Regarding duration between proposal and wedding the UK poll above gave an average of 2 years and 3 months 16 Traditions EditFairly casual in most European influenced cultures in some traditional societies courtship is a highly structured activity with very specific formal rules In some societies the parents or community propose potential partners and then allow limited courtship to determine whether the parties are suited In Japan there is such a type of courtship called Omiai with similar practices called Xiangqin 相親 in the Greater China Area 17 Parents will hire a matchmaker to provide pictures and resumes of potential mates and if the couple agrees there will be a formal meeting with the matchmaker and often parents in attendance 17 The matchmaker and parents will often exert pressure on the couple to decide whether they want to marry after a few meetings Courtship in the Philippines is one complex form of courtship Unlike other societies it takes a far more subdued and indirect approach 18 Its complexity involves stages and it is considered normal for courtship to last a year or longer It is common to see a man showing off by sending love letters and love poems singing romantic songs and buying gifts for a woman The parents are also seen as part of the courtship practice as their approval is commonly needed before courtship may begin or before the woman gives the man an answer to his advances 18 In more closed societies courtship is virtually eliminated by the practice of arranged marriages 17 in which partners are chosen for young people typically by their parents Forbidding experimental and serial courtship and sanctioning only arranged matches is partly a means of guarding the chastity of young people and partly a matter of furthering family interests which in such cultures may be considered more important than individual romantic preferences 19 Throughout history courtship has often included traditions such as exchanging valentines written correspondence facilitated by the creation of the postal service in the nineteenth century and similar communication based courting 20 Over recent decades though the concept of arranged marriage has changed or simply been mixed with other forms of courtship including Eastern and Indian ones Potential couples have the opportunity to meet and socialise with each other before deciding whether to continue the relationship Courtship in social theory EditCourtship is used by a number of theorists to explain gendering processes and sexual identity Scientific research into courtship began in the 1980s after which time academic researchers started to generate theories about modern courtship practices and norms Researchers have found that contrary to popular beliefs courtship is normally triggered and controlled by women 21 22 23 24 25 driven mainly by non verbal behaviours to which men respond One of the functions of romantic love is courtship 26 This is generally supported by other theorists who specialise in the study of body language 27 There are some feminist scholars however who regard courtship as a socially constructed and male led process organised to subjugate women 28 29 Farrell reports for example that magazines about marriage and romantic fiction continue to attract a 98 female readership 30 Systematic research into courtship processes inside the workplace 31 as well two ten year studies examining norms in different international settings 32 33 continue to support a view that courtship is a social process that socialises both sexes into accepting forms of relationship that maximise the chances of successfully raising children Commercial courtship services Edit As technology has progressed so too have the methods of courtship In online courtship individuals create profiles where they disclose personal information photographs hobbies interests religion and expectations Then the user can search through hundreds of thousands of accounts and connect with multiple people at once which in return gives the user more options and more opportunity to find what meets their standards Online courtship has influenced the idea of choice In Modern Romance An Investigation Aziz Ansari states that one third of marriages in the United States between 2005 and 2012 met through online courtship services 34 Today there are hundreds of sites to choose from and websites designed to fit specific needs such as Match eHarmony OkCupid Zoosk and ChristianMingle Mobile apps such as Grindr and Tinder allow users to upload profiles that are then judged by others on the service one can either swipe right on a profile indicating interest or swipe left which presents another possible mate Technology Edit Map showing the most popular social media applications by country Facebook is dominant in 2019 The Internet is shaping the way new generations meet Facebook Skype WhatsApp and other applications have made remote connections possible Online courtship tools are an alternate way to meet potential mates 35 36 Many people use smartphone apps such as Tinder Grindr or Bumble which allow a user to accept or reject another user with a single swipe of a finger 37 Some critics have suggested that matchmaking algorithms are imperfect and are no better than chance for the task of identifying acceptable partners 37 Others have suggested that the speed and availability of emerging technologies may be undermining the possibility for couples to have long term meaningful relationships when finding a replacement partner has potentially become too easy 37 Worldwide Edit A Japanese couple holding hands on the beach Courtship customs and habits vary considerably throughout the world The average duration of courtship before proceeding to engagement or marriage varies considerably throughout the world 38 Africa Edit Ethiopia Edit According to one source there are four ways that marriage can happen among the Nyangatom people 1 arranged marriage when well respected elders are sent to the girl s family on behalf of the boy s family 2 courtship after a friendly meeting between boy and girl such as at a market place or holiday where there s dancing 3 abduction such as during a blood feud between families 4 inheritance 39 North Africa Edit In North Africa like in many parts of the Middle East sex without marriage is considered unacceptable Courtship in North Africa is predominantly done under family supervision usually in a public place citation needed Asia Edit Asia is a mix of traditional approaches with involvement by parents and extended families such as arranged marriages as well as modern courtship In many cultural traditions including some in South Asia 40 and the Middle East 41 and to some extent East Asia as in the case of Omiai in Japan and the similar Xiangqin 相親 practiced in the Greater China Area a date may be arranged by a third party who may be a family member acquaintance or professional matchmaker China Edit See also Shanghai marriage market Patterns of courtship are changing in China with increased modernization bumping into traditional ways A 2003 report in China Daily suggested that courtship for most Chinese university women was difficult required work stole time away from academic advancement and placed women in a precarious position of having to balance personal success against traditional Chinese relationships 42 Many women were reported to have high standards for men they sought but also worried that their academic credentials could scare away more traditional Chinese men 42 It was reportedly difficult finding places to have privacy since many dormitory rooms had eight or more pupils in one suite while courtship in restaurants tended to be expensive 42 One student remarked American couples drink and dance together But in China we study together 42 Romantic love is more difficult during times of financial stress and economic forces can encourage singles particularly women to select a partner primarily on financial considerations Some men postpone marriage until their financial position is more secure and use wealth to help attract women One trend is towards exclusive matchmaking events for the rich and powerful for example an annual June event in Wuhan with expensive entry ticket prices for men 99 999 RMB lets financially secure men choose so called bikini brides based on their beauty and education and the financial exclusivity of the event was criticized by the official news outlet China Daily 43 Surveys though from 2015 to 2018 suggest that the majority of Chinese respondents especially college students would place the character and personality of their partners above material assets 44 45 46 47 48 with also increasing acceptance towards evenly splitting bills or going Dutch 49 50 51 There have been conflicting reports on expatriate courtship in China s capital city One account in 2006 suggested the courtship scene in Beijing to be sad with particular difficulties for foreign women hoping to find romance 52 It was reportedly due to the cold uninterested or unappealing attitudes of the male expats and the shyness and cultural differences of the Chinese men 52 and another account in 2010 documented similar if slightly improved results 53 A different report in 2010 though suggested that some Chinese men preferred Western women viewing them as less girlish and materialistic and also more independent and straightforward than Chinese women 54 A 2016 survey of Chinese students abroad however imply there have been significant barriers to foreign courtship 55 and the intermarriage rate of Chinese women in Shanghai has been decreasing 56 A new format of Internet QQ chat rooms is gaining ground against so called traditional courtship agencies in Changsha Hunan Province the QQ rooms have 20 000 members and service is much less expensive than courtship agencies which can charge 100 to 200 yuan 13 to US 26 per introduction 57 Internet courtship with computer assisted matchmaking is becoming more prevalent one site supposedly has 23 million registered users 58 Speed dating has come to Shanghai and other cities 59 60 Worldwide online matchmakers have explored entering the Chinese market via partnerships or acquisitions 61 Each year November 11 has become an unofficial holiday 62 known as China s Singles Day when singles are encouraged to make an extra effort to find a partner 63 Worried parents of unmarried children often arrange dates for their offspring on this day as well as others 63 Before the day approaches thousands of college students and young workers post messages describing their plans for this day In Arabic numerals the day looks like 1111 that is like four single people standing together and there was speculation that it originated in the late 1990s when college students celebrated being single with a little self mockery 62 but a differing explanation dates it back to events in the Roman Empire 62 For many Singles Day offers people a way to demonstrate their stance on love and marriage 62 In 2005 a government sponsored agency called Shanghai Women s Activities Centre Chinese Jinguoyuan organized periodic matchmaking events often attended by parents 64 There has been concern that young people s views of marriage have changed because of economic opportunities with many choosing deliberately not to get married 62 as well as young marrieds who have decided not to have children or to postpone having them 63 Cohabiting relationships are tolerated more often 3 Communities where people live but do not know each other well are becoming more common in China like elsewhere leading to fewer opportunities to meet somebody locally without assistance 63 Divorce rates are rising in cities such as Shanghai which recorded 27 376 divorces in 2004 an increase of 30 from 2003 63 Relationships between students preparing for college are frowned upon by many parents in China There was a report that sexual relations among middle schoolers in Guangzhou sometimes resulted in abortions 65 There have been reports of scams involving get rich quick schemes a forty year old migrant worker was one of a thousand seduced by an advertisement which read Rich woman willing to pay 3 million yuan for sperm donor but the worker was cheated out of his savings of 190 000 yuan US 27 500 66 The game show If You Are the One titled after Chinese personal ads featured some provocative contestants making sexual allusions and the show reportedly ran afoul of authorities and had to change its approach 67 The two host format involves a panel of 24 single women questioning a man to decide if he ll remain on the show if he survives he can choose a girl to date the show gained notoriety for controversial remarks and opinions such as model Ma Nuo saying she prefer to weep in a BMW than laugh on a bike who was later banned from making appearances 68 India Edit Indian courtship is heavily influenced by the custom of arranged marriages which require little courtship although there are strong indications that the institution is undergoing change and that love marriages are becoming more accepted as India becomes more intertwined with the rest of the world In the cities at least it is becoming more accepted for two people to meet and try to find if there is compatibility 69 An Indian wedding The majority of Indian marriages are arranged by parents and relatives and one estimate is that 7 of every 10 marriages are arranged 70 Sometimes the bride and groom don t meet until the wedding and there is no courtship or wooing before the joining 38 In the past it meant that couples were chosen from the same caste and religion and economic status 71 There is widespread support for arranged marriages generally Writer Lavina Melwani described a happy marriage which had been arranged by the bride s father and noted that during the engagement the woman was allowed to go out with him before they were married on only one occasion the couple married and found happiness 72 Supporters of arranged marriage suggest that there is a risk of having the marriage fall apart whether it was arranged by relatives or by the couple themselves and that what s important is not how the marriage came to be but what the couple does after being married 72 Parents and relatives exert considerable influence sometimes posting matrimonial ads in newspapers and online 71 Customs encourage families to put people together and discourage sexual experimentation as well as so called serial courtship in which a prospective bride or groom meets but continually rejects possible partners since the interests of the family are seen as more important than the romantic needs of the people marrying 73 Indian writers such as Mistry in his book Family Matters sometimes depict arranged marriages as unhappy 74 Writer Sarita Sarvate of India Currents thinks people calculate their value on the Indian marriage market according to measures such as family status and that arranged marriages typically united spouses who often didn t love each other 75 She suggested love was out of place in this world because it risked passion and sordid sexual liaisons 75 Love as she sees it is Waking up in the morning and thinking about someone 75 Writer Jennifer Marshall described the wife in an arranged marriage as living in a world of solitude without much happiness and feeling pressured by relatives to conceive a son so she wouldn t be considered as barren by her husband s family in this sense the arranged marriage didn t bring love happiness and companionship 76 Writer Vijaysree Venkatraman believes arranged marriages are unlikely to disappear soon commenting in his book review of Shoba Narayan s Monsoon Diary which has a detailed description of the steps involved in a present day arranged marriage 77 There are indications that even the institution of arranged marriages is changing with marriages increasingly being arranged by unknown unfamiliar sources and less based on local families who know each other 70 Writer Lavina Melwani in Little India compared Indian marriages to business deals Until recently Indian marriages had all the trappings of a business transaction involving two deal making families a hardboiled matchmaker and a vocal board of shareholders concerned uncles and aunts The couple was almost incidental to the deal They just dressed and showed up for the wedding ceremony And after that the onus was on them to adjust to the 1 001 relatives get to know each other and make the marriage work Lavina Melwani 71 Relationships in which courtship is undertaken by two people without parental involvement and sometimes carry on clandestine get togethers has become increasingly common When this leads to a wedding the resulting unions are sometimes called love marriages There are increasing instances when couples initiate contact on their own particularly if they live in a foreign country in one case a couple met surreptitiously over a game of cards 71 Indians who move abroad to Britain or America often follow the cultural patterns of their new country for example one Indian woman met a white American man while skiing and married him and the formerly all important relatives were reduced to bystanders trying to influence things ineffectively 71 Factors operating worldwide such as increased affluence the need for longer education and greater mobility have lessened the appeal for arranged marriages and these trends have affected criteria about which possible partners are acceptable making it more likely that pairings will cross previously impenetrable barriers such as caste or ethnic background 71 Indian Americans in the U S sometimes participate in Singles Meets organized by websites which happen about once a month with 100 participants at each event an organizer did not have firm statistics about the success rate leading to a long term relationship but estimated about one in every ten members finds a partner through the site 78 Courtship websites are gaining ground in India Writer Rupa Dev preferred websites which emphasized authenticity and screened people before entering their names into their databases making it a safer environment overall so that site users can have greater trust that it is safe to meet others on the site 79 Dev suggested that such websites were much better than the anonymous chatrooms of the 1990s 79 During the interval before marriage whether it is an arranged or a love marriage private detectives have been hired to check up on a prospective bride or groom or to verify claims about a potential spouse made in newspaper advertising and there are reports that such snooping is increasing 70 Detectives investigate former amorous relationships and can include fellow college students former police officers skilled in investigations and medical workers with access to health records 70 Transsexuals and eunuchs have begun using Internet services in some states in India 80 The practice of courtship runs against some religious traditions and one particular Hindu group Sri Ram Sena threatened to force unwed couples to marry if they were discovered courtship on Valentine s Day a fundamentalist leader said drinking and dancing in bars and celebrating this day has nothing to do with Hindu traditions 81 The threat sparked a protest via the Internet which resulted in cartloads of pink panties being sent to the fundamentalist leader s office 81 as part of the Pink Chaddi Campaign Pink Underwear Panties Campaign Another group Akhil Bharatiya Hindu Mahasabha threatened to do the same for which it was severely mocked online 82 and on the day after Valentine s Day had protesters outside its Delhi headquarters with people mockingly complaining that it did not fulfill its promise 83 with some having come with materials for the wedding rituals In India parents sometimes participate in websites designed to match couples 84 with some offering to organize double or group socialising 85 Japan Edit There is a type of courtship called Omiai in which parents hire a matchmaker to give resumes and pictures to potential mates for their approval leading to a formal meeting with parents and matchmaker attending 86 If the couple has a few rendezvous they re often pressured by the matchmaker and parents to decide whether or not to marry 86 Korea Edit The reasons for courtship in Korea are various Research conducted by Saegye Daily showed that teenagers choose to keep company for reasons such as to become more mature to gain consultation on worries or troubles or to learn the difference between boys and girls etc 87 Similarly a news report in MK Daily showed that the primary reasons for courtship for workers of around ages 20 30 are emotional stability marriage someone to spend time with etc 88 An interesting feature in the reasons for courtship in Korea is that many Koreans are somewhat motivated to find a partner due to the societal pressure that often views single persons as incompetent 89 Present Korean courtship shows a changing attitude due to the influence of tradition and modernization There are a lot of Confucian ideas and practices that still saturate South Korean culture and daily life as traditional values 90 Patriarchy in Korea has been grounded on Confucian culture that postulated hierarchical social orders according to age and sex 91 Patriarchy is a system of social structure and practices in which men dominate oppress and exploit women which is well reflected in the ways of courtship in Korea 92 full citation needed Adding to it there is an old saying that says a boy and a girl should not sit together after they have reached the age of seven It is one of the old teachings of Confucianism 93 and reveals its inclination toward conservatism Most Koreans tend to regard courtship as a precursor to marriage According to a survey conducted by Gyeonggi do Family Women s Researcher on people of age 26 44 85 7 of respondents replied as willing to get married The market for marriage agencies are growing continuously 94 DUO and Gayeon are one of the major marriage agencies in Korea Also Mat sun the blind date which is usually based on the premise of marriage is held often among ages of late 20s to 30s 95 But the late trend is leaning towards the separation between courtship and marriage unlike the conservative ways of the past 96 In the survey conducted by a marriage agency of 300 single males and females who were asked of their opinions on marrying their lovers about only 42 of the males and 39 of the females said yes 97 There are also cases of courtship without the premise of marriage However the majority still takes getting into a relationship seriously Courtship in Korea is also considered a necessary activity supported by society 89 Korean adults are constantly questioned whether or not they are courting by the people around them 89 During family gatherings on holidays one of the questions that people hate getting asked the most is related to marriage 98 According to a survey it was the highest ranked at 47 3 percent 98 College students in their sophomore to junior year who have not been in a relationship feel anxious that they are falling behind amongst their peers Most of them try sogaeting going out on a blind date for the first time to get into a relationship Courtship is a duty that most people feel they must take on to not seem incompetent 99 In recent trends even dramas such as Shining Romance 빛나는 로맨스 and Jang Bo ri is Here 왔다 장보리 and in a variety show called Dad Where Are We Going 아빠 어디가 there are elementary children confessing their love courtship has also been depicted to be an activity of fun and happiness There are Korean TV programs that film celebrities together as married couples supporting this depiction of courtship such as We Got Married 우리 결혼했어요 With You 님과 함께 and The Man Who Gets Married Daily 매일 결혼 하는 남자 99 According to a survey by wedding consulting agency men consider a physical relation as a catalyst of love otherwise women regard it as a confirmation of affection Adding to it both 79 2 of men and 71 0 of women stated that how deep their physical relation in courtship is concerned in the decision of whether to marry 100 Pakistan Edit Marriages and courtship in Pakistan are influenced by traditional cultural practices similar to those elsewhere in the Indian subcontinent as well as Muslim norms and manners Illegitimate relationships before marriage are considered a social taboo and social interaction between unmarried men and women is encouraged at a modest and healthy level Couples are usually wedded through either an arranged marriage or love marriage Love marriages are those in which the individuals have chosen a partner whom they like by their own choice prior to marriage and usually occur with the consent of parents and family Arranged marriages on the other hand are marriages which are set and agreed by the families or guardians of the two individuals where the couple may not have met before In either cases and in consistency with traditional marital practices individuals who marry are persuaded to meet and talk to each other for some time before considering marrying so that they can check their compatibility Singapore Edit Singapore s largest courtship service SDU Social Development Unit is government run The original SDU which controversially promoted marriages among university graduate singles no longer exists today On 28 January 2009 it was merged with SDS Social Development Services which just as controversially promoted marriages among non graduate singles The merged unit SDN Social Development Network seeks to promote meaningful relationships with marriage touted as a top life goal among all resident Singapore singles within a conducive network environment of singles relevant commercial and public entities Taiwan Edit Survey of Taiwan students Statement AgreeHopeful they ll find a relationship 37 Have no clear idea how to approach someone who interested them 90 Changes of heart and cheating cause breakups 60 Willing to resume relationship if problems are resolved 31 Having more than one relationship at a time isn t good 70 Women who won t enter a relationship if man lives too far away 70 Women who believe height in men matters 96 source China Daily 101 One report suggested that in southern Taiwan traditional rules of courtship still apply despite the influence of popular culture for example men continue to take the initiative in forming relationships 101 A poll in 2009 of students at high schools and vocational schools found that over 90 admitted that they had no clear idea of how to approach someone of the opposite sex who interested them What caused relationships to break up 60 said changes of heart or cheating Courtship with more than one person at a time was not permissible agreed 70 Iran Edit People of different sexes are not allowed to mix freely in public 102 Since 1979 the state has become a religious autocracy and imposes Islamic edicts on matters such as courtship Clerics run officially sanctioned internet courtship agencies with strict rules 102 Prospective couples can have three meetings two with strict supervision inside the center and the third being a brief encounter on their own afterwards they can either 1 choose to marry or 2 agree to never see each other again 102 This has become the subject of a film by Iranian filmmaker Leila Lak 102 Iran has a large population of young people with 70 percent of the 83 million population being under the age of thirty 103 However economic hardship discourages marriage and divorce rates have increased in Tehran to around a quarter of marriages 103 even though divorce is taboo 103 While the Iranian government condemns courtship and relationships it promotes marriage with 1 online courses 2 courtship classes where students can earn a diploma after sitting through weekly tests and hundreds of hours of education 3 marriage diplomas 4 matchmaking and arranged marriages 103 Authorities push a conservative approach and shun unmarried romantic relationships and encourage traditional match making 103 But young people have disobeyed the restrictions one said It is wiser to have different relationships and believed in defying religious rules which suggest short term illegitimate relationships harm dignity 103 Adultery can be punished by death 103 While youths can flout selected restrictions there are almost no instances in which unmarried people move in together 103 There have been efforts to promote Sigheh temporary marriage 103 Israel Edit In Israel in the secular community courtship is very common amongst both heterosexual and homosexual couples However because of the religious community there are some religious exceptions to the courtship process In the Haredi and Chasidic communities Ultra Orthodox Judaism most couples are paired through a matchmaker Lebanon Edit One report suggests courtship is hampered by the weight of family demands upon individual choice and that there were difficulties particularly for people seeking to marry across religious lines such as a Christian seeking to marry a Muslim 104 Saudi Arabia Edit The Saudi Gazette quoted a Wikipedia article on domestic violence suggesting it was an issue for Saudis including abusive behavior while courting by one or both partners 105 North America Edit United States Edit One report suggested the United States as well as other western oriented countries were different from the rest of the world because love is the reason for mating as opposed to marriages being arranged to cement economic and class ties between families and promote political stability 2 Courtship known there as dating by mutual consent of two single people is the norm British writer Kira Cochrane after moving to the U S found herself grappling with the American approach to courtship 106 She wondered why it was acceptable to juggle 10 potential partners while weighing different attributes she found American style dating to be exhausting and strange 106 She found courtship in America to be organized in a fairly formal fashion with men approaching women and asking point blank for a date she found this to be awkward 106 She described the third date rule which was that women weren t supposed to have sex until the third date even if they desired it although men were supposed to try for sex 107 She wrote Dating rules almost always cast the man as aggressor and the woman as prey which frankly makes me feel nauseous 107 Canadian writer Danielle Crittenden however chronicling female angst criticized a tendency not to take courtship seriously and suggested that postponing marriage into one s thirties was problematic 108 By waiting and waiting and waiting to commit to someone our capacity for love shrinks and withers This doesn t mean that women or men should marry the first reasonable person to come along or someone with whom they are not in love But we should at a much earlier age than we do now take a serious attitude toward dating and begin preparing ourselves to settle down For it s in the act of taking up the roles we ve been taught to avoid or postpone wife husband mother father that we build our identities expand our lives and achieve the fullness of character we desire Danielle Crittenden 1999 108 Journalist Emily Witt in 2016 wrote that while social mores had changed to accept a wider range of sexual practices there was still much loneliness and anxiety 109 She traveled to San Francisco and began dating a lot using Internet dating services and apps and sometimes going to singles bars alone only to find that the romantic comedy concept of love with a perfect permanent tea for two ending was not going to happen to her 109 There is evidence that couples differ in the pace and timing with which they initiate sex in their relationships Studies show that approximately 50 of premarital young adult couples become sexually involved within the first month of dating while 25 initiate sex one to three months after beginning to date and a small proportion of couples wait until marriage before initiating sexual relations 110 Teenagers and college aged students tend to avoid the more formal activity of dating and prefer casual no strings attached experiments sometimes described as hookups It permits young women to go out and fit into the social scene get attention from young men and learn about sexuality according to one report by sociologists 111 The term hookup can describe a wide variety of behavior ranging from kissing to non genital touching according to one report only about one third of people had sexual intercourse 111 A contrary report however suggested there has been no sea change in sexual behavior regarding college students from 1988 onwards and that the term hookup itself continued to be used to describe a variety of relationships including merely socializing or passionate kissing as well as sexual intercourse 112 Muslims living in the United States can choose whether to use traditional Islamic methods or date American style Muslims choosing to stick to Islamic tradition can only marry another Muslim according to one Malaysian account Mosques have been known to try to bring people together one in California has a dating service for Muslims 113 Europe Edit United Kingdom Edit Flirting aristocratic stylePainting by Frederic Soulacroix 1858 1933 In Britain if two people are going out together their relationship has normally advanced to a relatively long standing and sexual boyfriend girlfriend relationship although they re not cohabiting Writer Kira Cochrane advises to get out there and meet people while noting a trend of temporary suspension of marriage until an individual reaches his or her thirties 114 She sees a trend for developing new ways of meeting people 114 In contrast writer Bibi van der Zee found etiquette rules to be helpful and found that supposedly liberated advice such as just be yourself to be the most useless advice in history 115 She expresses frustration following fruitless sexual relationships and that her mid twenties saw relationships with partners who were less willing to return phone calls or display interest in long term commitment She felt clueless and unwanted she wrote and found advice books such as The Rules helpful 116 British writer Henry Castiglione signed up for a weekend flirting course and found the experience helpful he was advised to talk to and smile at everyone he met 117 Emailing back and forth after meeting on a website is one way to get to know people in Britain and elsewhere 118 In the UK one estimate from 2009 was that 15 million people are single and half of these are seeking a long term relationship three quarters of them have not been in a relationship for more than 18 months 119 A Pew study in 2005 which examined Internet users in long term relationships including marriage found that many met by contacts at work or at school 120 In a twelve month period the average number of assignations that a single person will have is four 119 When courting 43 of people google potential partners ahead of time 121 Almost five million Britons used websites in the past twelve months 119 A third admitting to lying on their profile 119 A fifth of married individuals between 19 and 25 met their spouse online 119 One poll in 2009 of 3 000 couples suggested that the average duration of their courtship period between first meeting to the acceptance of a marriage proposal was three years 122 In 2017 Britain online fraud victim numbers were at record high According to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau there were 3 889 victims of so called romance fraud in 2016 123 who handed over a record 39m Online safety in the UK is a concern for authorities and individuals German speaking countries Edit Ball of City of Vienna 1900 While analysts such as Harald Martenstein and others suggest that it is easier for persons to initiate contact in America many Germans view the American dating habits as unspontaneous ridiculous and rigid citation needed Until the 1960s countries such as Germany Switzerland and Austria had a more formal approach for first contacts that was eased during seasonal festivals like carnival and festivals and funfairs like the Oktoberfest which allowed for more casual flirts 124 Membership in voluntary associations is relatively high in German speaking countries and these provided further chances for possible partners to meet Strolling on Esplanades and Promenade walkways such as the one in Hamburg called the Jungfernstieg maidens way have been another venue for introductions as early as the 19th century Analyst Geoffrey Gorer described dating as an American idiosyncrasy focusing on youth of college age and expressed in activities such as American proms In contrast German speaking countries and the longstanding musical tradition there provided ample opportunity of persons of varying ages enjoying social dances such as the Vienna Opera Ball and other occasions Romantic encounters were often described with French terms like rendezvous or tete a tete The German term of Stelldichein as translated by Joachim Heinrich Campes is used to signify courtship when the age of consent to marriage was relatively high German traditions to signify lovers who met in hiding were described with terms like Fensterln windowing or Kiltgang dawn stroll used in Bavaria and Switzerland 125 Analyst Sebastian Heinzel sees a major cultural divide between American courtship habits and European informality and leads to instances in which European expatriates in cities such as New York keep to themselves 126 Today most German couples in long term relationships get to know each other through mutual friends at work or while going out at night the first few months of courtship often involve sexual intercourse but are still rather casual and do not imply a serious wish to get married 127 Italy Edit Italians maintain a conservative approach to courtship Also inviting friends or relatives during a rendezvous is not uncommon More modern approaches such as blind dates speed dating and websites are not as popular as abroad and are not considered very effective by the majority of the population citation needed Spain Edit One report suggested Spanish women were the greatest flirts based on an unofficial study which ranked countries based on initiations of contact 128 Oceania Edit Australia Edit A recent study revealed that 50 of Australians agreed it was permissible to request to go out via a text message but not acceptable to break up this way 13 Flirting while texting dubbed flirtext was more likely to be done by girls after a relationship was started 13 A survey of newspaper readers suggested it was time to abandon the old fashioned rule of men paying for the first outing based on women s greater earning capacity 129 South America Edit Brazil Edit In Brazil there is a longer time interval before children move out of the house which affects courtship 130 As a result parents offer advice about courtship although it may not be heeded 130 LGBT EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it July 2020 A same sex male couple holding hands on the street Courtship behavior of non heterosexual individuals doesn t always reflect their self ascribed sexual orientation Some of them recognized from early age that they re attracted to the same sex or both all sexes but may initially adhere to heterosexual norms in their courtship behaviors Some individuals who identify as LGBT in one way or another but are questioning or haven t come out to their peers and family may wait years before they start courting their preferred sex 131 According to a Psychology Today report men who identify as homosexual recognize their same sex attraction in their late teens or early twenties and they tend to care more about physical attractiveness than the status of a prospective partner 132 Men who identify as homosexual on average tend to have more sexual partners while women who identify as lesbian tend to form steadier one on one relationships and tend to be less promiscuous than heterosexual women 132 dubious discuss In India transgender individuals and eunuchs have used internet dating to help them find partners but there continue to be strong societal pressures which marginalize them 80 Matchmakers EditMain article Matchmaking This section contains instructions advice or how to content The purpose of Wikipedia is to present facts not to train Please help improve this article either by rewriting the how to content or by moving it to Wikiversity Wikibooks or Wikivoyage July 2020 The Matchmaker painting by Gerard van Honthorst 1590 1656 People can meet other people on their own or the get together can be arranged by someone else Matchmaking is an art based entirely on hunches since it is impossible to predict with certainty whether two people will like each other or not All you should ever try and do is make two people be in the same room at the same time advised matchmaker Sarah Beeny in 2009 and the only rule is to make sure the people involved want to be set up 133 One matchmaker advised it was good to match brains as well as beauty and try to find people with similar religious and political viewpoints and thinks that like minded people result in more matches although acknowledging that opposites sometimes attract 134 It is easier to put several people together at the same time so there are other candidates possible if one doesn t work out 134 And after introducing people don t meddle 134 Friends as matchmakers Edit Friends remain a common way for people to meet 135 However the Internet promises to overtake friends in the future if present trends continue 136 135 A friend can introduce two people who do not know each other and the friend may play matchmaker and send them on a blind date Family as matchmakers Edit Parents via their contacts with associates or neighbors or friends can introduce their children to each other In India parents often place matrimonial ads in newspapers or online and may post the resumes of the prospective bride or groom 137 Matchmaking systems and services Edit Matchmaking systems can be systematic and organized ways to improve matchmaking by using rules or technology The meeting can be in person or live as well as separated by time or space such as by telephone or email or chat based The purpose of the meeting is for the two persons to decide whether to go out together in the future See also EditArranged marriage Bekisa Courtship disorder Dating Haptic communication Human mating strategies Hypergamy Love letter Flash marriageReferences Edit Pilip T Weller 1948 Rite of Betrothal Society of Saint Pius X p 2 a b Kris Paap Douglas Raybeck 2005 A Differently Gendered Landscape Gender and Agency in the Web 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luckless bachelors China Daily Retrieved 2010 12 09 Forty year old migrant worker Li Hai thought his chance to get rich quick had arrived when he saw the tabloid advertisement Rich woman willing to pay 3 million yuan for sperm donor Li Jing 2010 07 02 Playing by the rules in the game of love China Daily Retrieved 2010 12 09 the popular dating show If You Are the One Lin Qi 2010 04 24 The Dating game by Jiangsu TV China Daily Retrieved 2010 12 09 a jury of 24 single women question one guy India s Arranged Marriage Traditions Live on in U S archive nytimes com Retrieved 2021 05 24 a b c d AFP 5 July 2010 Private detectives a pre nuptial priority for some in India France 24 Archived from the original on 2 August 2010 Retrieved 2010 12 09 nine out of 10 marriages are still arranged a b c d e f Lavina Melwani 2010 The Mating Game Little India Archived from the original on 2010 12 14 Retrieved 2010 12 08 Until recently Indian marriages a b Lavina Melwani 2010 The Mating Game Little India Archived from the original on 2010 12 14 Retrieved 2010 12 08 Patel still believes arranged marriages are a good idea Any marriage needs work whether it s an arranged marriage or love Courtship China Daily 2009 10 16 Archived from the original on 2011 07 23 Retrieved 2010 12 09 Forbidding experimental and serial courtship and sanctioning only arranged matches is partly a means of guarding the chastity of young people and partly a matter of furthering family interests Poornima Apte Elizabeth Walter Oct 30 2002 Families Matter India Currents Archived from the original on 2011 07 13 Retrieved 2010 12 09 He entered into an unhappy arranged marriage with a Parsi widow with two children a b c Sarita Sarvate March 31 2005 What is Love India Currents Archived from the original on October 18 2006 Retrieved December 8 2010 Eventually I would agree to an arranged marriage with a man I would never love But forever I would remember that afternoon at the canal and the possibility of love Jennifer Marshall Feb 28 2010 Beauty Made from Loneliness India Currents Archived from the original on January 26 2013 Retrieved 2010 12 08 Sonabai Rajawar s arranged marriage to her husband however marked the beginning of a life lived in solitude hidden from her large family and community for 15 years in her marital home Vijaysree Venkatraman Jul 11 2003 A Literary Feast book review of Monsoon Diary A Memoir with Recipes by Shoba Narayan India Currents Archived from the original on 2010 07 16 Retrieved 2010 12 08 This custom is not about to vanish any time soon Lavina Melwani 2010 The Mating Game Little India Archived from the original on 2010 12 14 Retrieved 2010 12 08 He estimates that globally 1 out of every 10 members finds a life partner through the site a b Rupa Dev Nov 3 2008 Love Online India Currents Archived from the original on 2010 12 25 Retrieved 2010 12 08 Dating websites choose whether to accept or reject potential users based on the preliminary information provided In doing so a safer online community is supposedly created a b AFP 29 December 2009 India s transsexuals try Internet dating France 24 Archived from the original on 22 January 2011 Retrieved 2010 12 09 a b Nandita VIJ 2009 07 23 Women plan pink panty response to Hindu Taliban France 24 Archived from the original on 2009 03 03 Retrieved 2010 12 09 Hindu Mahasabha becomes butt of jokes on Twitter for its Valentine s Day warning India Today 2015 02 04 Retrieved 2015 05 06 Vijetha S N 2015 02 15 Love in the time of Hindutva The Hindu Retrieved 2015 05 06 Lavina Melwani 2010 The Mating Game Little India Archived from the original on 2010 12 14 Retrieved 2010 12 08 Matrimonial sites Even parents approve because young people get to know each other without physical contact Parents get to check the details important to them and the couple can connect at many levels While parents and family members post the resumes of a prospective bride or groom Business Rx Dating Web site eTourage seeks to find more love The Washington Post September 13 2010 Retrieved 2010 12 09 The site then creates a double or a group date with sets of mutually interested couples a b Courtship China Daily 2009 10 16 Archived from the original on 2011 07 23 Retrieved 2010 12 09 In Japan Omiai Parents will hire a matchmaker to provide pictures and resumes of potential mates 중학입학전 이성교제 76 naver com MK News 직장인 연애 목적 1위는 결혼이 아니다 mk co kr 6 June 2013 a b c 살며 사랑하며 안주연 연애 난민 kukinews com 9 December 2012 Korean Confucianism Contemporary society and Confucianism Kim Kwang ok 1996 The Reproduction of Confucian Culture in Contemporary Korea An Anthropological Study Confucian Traditions in East Asian Modernity Harvard University Press The Review of Korean Studies 5 2 9 2002 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a Missing or empty title help 남녀칠세부동석 naver com MK News 배우자나 찾아볼까 불황에도 잘나가는 결혼정보회사 mk co kr 29 November 2013 미혼女 35 나이들수록 맞선상대 단점 부각 Unemployed women 35 acrofan com in Korean 2013 01 24 Retrieved 2017 03 14 애인과 결혼이 망설여지는 이유는 무엇 Archived from the original on 2014 06 26 미혼남녀 절반이상 연애 상대와 결혼 글쎄 More than half of unmarried men and women munhwa com in Korean 2012 09 14 Retrieved 2017 03 14 a b 명절 스트레스 1위 질문 결혼은 애인은 애는 News1 in Korean 9 February 2013 a b 제1000호 연애 마침내 스펙 이 되다 특집일반 특집 뉴스 한겨레21 hani co kr in Korean 연인들의 스킨쉽 男 사랑의 촉진제 女 애정확인 donga com in Korean 10 July 2008 a b Traditional courtship still fashionable China Daily 2009 02 12 Retrieved 2010 12 09 a b c d Clerical Cupid A Muslim cleric runs Iran s first officially sanctioned internet dating agency Al Jazeera 1 Feb 2009 Retrieved 2010 12 09 In Iran where the different sexes are not allowed to mix freely meeting Mister or Misses Right is not easy a b c d e f g h i AFP 15 March 2010 Islamic Iran offers courting diplomas to cut divorce France 24 Archived from the original on 26 November 2011 Retrieved 2010 12 09 Jim Quilty December 9 2010 Lebanon News A Stray Bullet lands in Cairo The Daily Star Retrieved 2010 12 09 Domestic violence Saudi Gazette 2010 12 09 Archived from the original on 2012 05 17 Retrieved 2010 12 09 Wikipedia tells us that domestic violence can be broadly defined as a pattern of abusive behaviors by one or both partners in an intimate relationship such as marriage dating a b c Kira Cochrane 24 January 2009 Should I follow any rules The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 In the US it was perfectly acceptable to juggle 10 potential partners or more while weighing up their relative attributes a b Kira Cochrane 24 January 2009 Should I follow any rules The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 I also learned of the third date rule the most central and widely recognised of all dating rules which decrees that there should be no sex until the third date a b Danielle Crittenden 1999 What Our Mothers Didn t Tell Us Why Happiness Eludes the Modern Woman book excerpt The New York Times Books Retrieved 2011 02 12 a b Casey Schwartz August 26 2016 Sex and Dating Now the Thinking Gal s Subject The writer Emily Witt in the woods near her family s home in rural New Hampshire where she often retreats to write The New York Times Retrieved August 29 2016 At 30 the writer Emily Witt found herself single and heartbroken intent on examining the mythology around how life for women Ms Witt now 35 nonfiction seeks to blend personal writing with social analysis Busby D M Carroll J S amp Willoughby B J 2010 Compatibility or restraint The effects of sexual timing on marriage relationships Journal of Family Psychology 24 6 766 774 doi 10 1037 a0021690 a b Elizabeth A Armstrong Laura Hamilton Paula England Summer 2010 Is Hooking Up Bad For Young Women American Sociological Association Retrieved 2010 12 13 Brian Alexander NBC News August 12 2013 New study on hooking up finds no sexual sea change American Sociological Association retrieved Aug 12 2013 Malaysia wakes up to child abuse Al Jazeera 11 Feb 2008 Retrieved 2010 12 09 The western practice of dating is clearly out and according to Islamic tradition a Muslim can only marry another Muslim a b Kira Cochrane 24 January 2009 Should I follow any rules The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 The problem with most dating rules They make a game and a chore out of something that should be natural and fun and overwhelming Bibi van der Zee 24 January 2009 Play by the Rules The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 There is a whole generation of children of the 70s like me who never had any useful dating advice from our liberated mums beyond Bibi van der Zee 24 January 2009 Play by the Rules The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 My self esteem was on the floor and I had no idea what to do about it like every other woman I knew I felt clueless and unwanted Henry Castiglione 24 January 2009 Who s a cheeky boy then Can newly single and clumsy with women Henry Castiglione master the fine art of flirting in one weekend The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 I needed to learn some new moves so I signed up for a weekend flirting course Marc Zakian 26 January 2009 Treat em mean keep em keen The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 The most appealing kind of email to send is friendly funny and flattering Don t write a tome or reveal too much and don t suggest meeting up right away a b c d e Raw dater The Guardian 24 January 2009 Retrieved 2010 12 08 15 million people in the UK are currently estimated to be single Madden Mary Research Specialist Lenhart Amanda Senior Research Specialist September 2005 Online Dating Americans who are seeking romance use the internet to help them in their search but there is still widespread public concern about the safety of online dating Pew Internet amp American Life Project Archived from the original on 2010 11 28 Retrieved 2010 12 08 Raw dater The Guardian 24 January 2009 Retrieved 2010 12 08 43 of people Google their first date before they meet them Courtship China Daily 2009 10 16 Archived from the original on 2011 07 23 Retrieved 2010 12 09 In the United Kingdom a poll of 3 000 engaged or married couples resulted in an average duration between first meeting and accepted proposal of marriage of 2 years and 11 months Online dating fraud victim numbers at record high BBC News 2017 01 23 According to the National Fraud Intelligence Bureau there were 3 889 victims of so called romance fraud last year who handed over a record 39m Politik in einer deutschen Kleinstadt d i Bretten Enke Stuttgart 1970 ISBN 3 432 01618 2 Benita Luckmann No talk no deal Unser Kolumnist versteht endlich die amerikanischen Regeln der Partnerwahl Our Commentator finally understands the American Rucles of choosing a partner Harald Martenstein Die Zeit 29 June 2009 Das war so nicht verabredet This we haven t agreed upon Tagesspiegel 7 October 2007 Sebastian Heinzel Wo findet man einen Partner Studie zeigt Freunde Bar Arbeit und Internet BILD de 10 January 2013 Feisty Spanish women top flirting league table study The Independent 3 November 2010 Retrieved 17 June 2018 Jane Lee October 25 2010 Modern couples should abandon old fashioned rules of dating The Daily Telegraph Retrieved 2010 12 14 a b Vanessa June 23 2008 Ask a Brazilian Differences and Love Gringoes com Archived from the original on 2011 02 04 Retrieved 2010 12 09 For me the main difference between Brazilians and Americans is that you are less dependent when it comes to family DiDonato Theresa E October 11 2019 Why Bisexual People Face Unique Dating Challenges Psychology Today Retrieved 2021 07 08 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint url status link a b Douglas T Kenrick June 9 2010 Homosexuality A queer problem A few puzzles about homosexuality some still unsolved Psychology Today Retrieved 2010 12 13 homosexual men are most attracted to men in their late teens and early twenties Hannah Pool 28 January 2009 What friends are for Hannah Pool was a matchmaking cynic until she was set up with her current partner four years ago So what advice does she have for potential matchmakers The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 All you should ever try and do is make two people be in the same room at the same time says Sarah Beeny founder of matchmaking website mysinglefriend com The most important rule is to make sure the people involved actually want to be set up a b c Hannah Pool 28 January 2009 What friends are for Hannah Pool was a matchmaking cynic until she was set up with her current partner four years ago So what advice does she have for potential matchmakers The Guardian Retrieved 2010 12 08 Match brains as well as beauty and don t forget about religious and political views Sure opposites sometimes attract but more often than not they repel a b Sharon Jayson 2010 02 10 Internet changing the game of love USA Today Retrieved 2010 12 08 Meeting through friends was also commonly cited by those in the 1992 National Health and Social Life Survey co directed by sociologist Edward Laumann of the University of Chicago That survey questioned 3 300 adults ages 18 to 59 Sharon Jayson 2010 02 10 Internet changing the game of love USA Today Retrieved 2010 12 08 People who met 20 25 or 30 years ago were more likely to mention co workers he says and people who met in the past 10 years were less likely to mention co workers Lavina Melwani 2010 The Mating Game Little India Archived from the original on 2010 12 14 Retrieved 2010 12 08 Matrimonial sites Even parents approve because young people get to know each other without physical contact Parents get to check the details important to them and the couple can connect at many levels While parents and family members post the resumes of a prospective bride or groom Further reading EditMoira Weigel 2016 Labor of Love The Invention of Dating Farrar Straus and Giroux ISBN 978 0374182533 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Courtship Look up courtship in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikimedia Commons has media related to Courtship Sea Turtle Reproduction BioExpedition 2015 Okuayama J Kagawa S Arai N 2014 Random Mate Searching Male Sea Turtle Targets Juvenile for Mating Behavior Chelonian Conservation and Biology 13 2 278 282 doi 10 2744 CCB 1086 1 S2CID 86574012 Stewart K R Dutton P H 2014 Breeding Sex Rations in Adult Leatherback Turtles Dermochelys coriacea May compensate for Female Biased hatchling Sex Rations PLOS ONE 9 2 1 5 Bibcode 2014PLoSO 988138S doi 10 1371 journal pone 0088138 PMC 3913748 PMID 24505403 Stevenson Hamilton J 1912 Animal Life in Africa New York E P Dutton and Company Barklow W 2004 Amphibious communication with sound in Hippopotamus amphibius Animal Behaviour 68 5 1125 1132 doi 10 1016 j anbehav 2003 10 034 S2CID 53146581 Mason k 2013 Hippopotamus amphibius Animal Diversity Web Accessed 8 December 2015 Klingel H 1995 Fluctuating fortunes of the river horse Cover story Natural History 104 5 46 Sandigeo Zoo library 2001 Hippopotamus Hippopotamus amphibious amp Pygmy Hippopotamus Cheoropsis liberiensis Revised 2011 Archived 8 December 2015 Fletscher D J C Tribe G D Natural emergency queen rearing by apis mellifera adansonii ii In African Bees Taxonomy Biology and Economic Use Fletscher D J C Ed Apimondia Pretoria South Africa 1977 pp 132 140 Heidinger Ina Monika Margret et al 2014 Factors Influencing the Duration and Frequency of Nuptial Flights Insects 5 3 513 527 doi 10 3390 insects5030513 PMC 4592583 PMID 26462822 Sabar Nassar Ayob Masri Kendall Graham Qu Rong 2012 A honey bee mating optimization algorithm for educational timetabling problems European Journal of Operational Research 216 3 533 543 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 298 7164 doi 10 1016 j ejor 2011 08 006 Neumann Peter Moritz Robin F A Praagh Jobvan 1999 Queen mating frequency in different types of honey bee mating apiaries Journal of Apicultural Research 38 1 2 11 18 doi 10 1080 00218839 1999 11100990 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Courtship amp oldid 1151548785, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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