Charles Dickens and his contribution to the celebration of Christmas: Literary reinvention of tradition
Charles Dickens, the most popular and influential English-language writer of the 19th century, performed a unique cultural act: he did not just describe the modern holiday he was living in, but actually reinvented and canonized the Victorian Christmas image that laid the foundation for our modern perceptions. His contribution extends far beyond writing the famous novella "A Christmas Carol" (1843). He formed the ethical and emotional framework of the holiday.
Historical context: Christmas before Dickens
In the early 19th century, the Christmas holiday in Britain was in decline. The Puritan legacy of the 17th century (when the holiday was officially abolished as pagan) and the Industrial Revolution significantly weakened its traditions. For the working class, it was just another workday. Ancient customs, such as the distribution of alms, banquets, and festivities, were preserved only in rural areas. Christmas was neither a mass family holiday nor a commercial phenomenon. It needed a new ideology, and Dickens provided it.
"A Christmas Carol" (1843) as a cultural manifestoThe novella written in six weeks out of financial necessity and creative inspiration became a social upheaval. Its plot about the transformation of Scrooge the miser after the visit of four spirits focused on new Christmas ideals:
Family as the center of the holiday. The scene in the Cratchit home, where love and gratitude reign despite poverty, became archetypal. Dickens shifted the focus from noisy street festivities and drinking to a narrow family circle, creating the image of a "domestic," cozy Christmas.
Compassion and philanthropy. The spirit of Christmas in Dickens is primarily the spirit of mercy. Scrooge, sending a giant turkey to a poor family, is a model of new behavior. The writer directly linked personal joy with the obligation to help those in need, which resonated with the conscience ...
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