Christmas Laughter by O. Henry: "The Gift of the Magi" and the Philosophy of Absurdity in Festive New York
Introduction: Laughter Through Tears and Steam
O. Henry (William Sydney Porter, 1862–1910) transformed the Christmas tale into a visionary exploration of the American society. His festive humor is not sentimental melancholy but a complex psychological and social mechanism where comedy arises from the collision of high romance with the harsh realism of the big city. A scientific analysis of his narrative allows us to speak of the formation of a special literary trope – "New York Christmas," where laughter serves as a tool for survival and at the same time a form of criticism of capitalist reality.
Phenomenology of the "New York" holiday: the city as a stage for absurdity
Christmas in O. Henry unfolds not in an idyllic province but in the urban chaos of New York, where the holiday becomes a catalyst for existential situations. In the famous story "The Gift of the Magi" (1905), the central theme is a paradox rising to the concept of "superior absurdity": the newlyweds Della and Jim sacrifice their main treasures (hair and a watch) to buy each other useless gifts (hair combs and a watch chain). Laughter here is not born from joy but from the recognition of the tragic and sublime irrationality of human actions, their detachment from the utilitarian logic of the market. This is a philosophical laughter that acknowledges the victory of love over pragmatism.
Scientific context: Economist Thorstein Veblen described "demonstrative consumption" at the same time, but O. Henry shows an inversion of this model: his characters perform "demonstrative sacrifice," where the value of the act is measured not by the price tag but by the degree of self-sacrifice.
Poetics of the "little man": humor as anesthetic and weapon
O. Henry masterfully uses humor to distance himself from social pain. In the story "The Christmas Thief," the so-called thief, a tramp, instead of stealing, puts a ...
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