Christmas Ghosts and Their Representation in Literature: From Folk Beliefs to Social Critique
Introduction: The Yuletide as a Time of Meeting Worlds
The tradition of Christmas "scary stories" (Christmas ghost stories) dates back to ancient beliefs about the winter solstice and the subsequent Yuletide as a period when the boundary between the world of the living and the world of the dead thins. In English and European literature of the 19th century, this folkloric layer was artistically reinterpreted and transformed into a powerful tool for psychological analysis and social criticism. The Christmas ghost ceased to be just a frightening folkloric character and became a carrier of a moral lesson, conscience, or memory, appearing in the midst of the holiday of abundance to expose social ills and personal vices.
1. Folkloric Origins and the Formation of the Canon
Before literary processing, ghosts and spirits were an integral part of Yuletide festivities and beliefs. In the British tradition, it was believed that from Christmas Eve to Epiphany (12 days), spirits were allowed to return to earth. This was a time of divination, caroling, and storytelling by the fireplace. Romantic writers such as Washington Irving in "Sketch Book" (1820) documented this custom, creating an atmosphere of cozy horror. However, the true flowering of the genre is associated with the Victorian era, when the Christmas issue of a magazine with a "scary story" became a commercially successful format.
2. Charles Dickens: The Ghost as a Tool for Moral Transformation
The climax and classic of the genre is "A Christmas Carol in Prose" (1843) by Charles Dickens. Dickens radically changed the function of the Christmas ghost, making it not just a scarecrow but a catalyst for internal transformation.
The Ghost of Marley: This is a "warning ghost". His appearance, shackled with heavy chains made of "cash, office books, steel purses," embodies the metaphor of spiritual slavery in which Scrooge exists. Marley ...
Read more