Dusted off this post from December 2018 because, well, keep reading.
Pick up any women’s magazine this month and chances are there’s an article about how to handle the stress of Christmas. I always assumed this to be a modern phenomenon until I picked up The Battle for Christmas by Stephen Nissenbaum.
Throughout the book, Nissenbaum also makes the case that a commercial Christmas is also not a product of modernity, but was an integral part of the transformation of Christmas from a rowdy, drunken celebration of the annual slaughter to a more domesticated affair that included women and children. As he writes, “there never was a time when Christmas existed as an unsullied domestic idyll, immune to the taint of commercialism…indeed, the domestic Christmas was itself a force in the spread of consumer capitalism.”
If you’re curious to read more about the origins of American Christmas traditions - Santa Claus, Christmas trees, and “personalized” mass-produced presents - add The Battle for Christmas to your list. You know you have one.
2 comments:
Yes I do.
I bought this book due to your recommendation! (Still working my way through...) And not to sound crazy / -ier than you thought I was, I was told Jesus' *real* birthday was July 11th. But maybe my spiritual team was pulling my leg? It's hard to tell. But when I asked them, that's what they said.
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