Christmas Eve in the USA and Canada: Between Commerce, Multiculturalism, and the Home Hearth
Introduction: The North American Model of Christmas Eve
Christmas Eve in the USA and Canada is a complex cultural hybrid formed under the influence of Anglo-Saxon, French, German, and increasingly Latin American traditions, filtered through mass culture and commercialization. It is a time of intense final act of festive preparation, balancing between the bustling hustle of metropolises and the idealized quiet of suburban homes. Phenomenologically, it is a day of acute anticipation, where the expectation of the miracle coexists with the pragmatism of last-minute shopping and family gatherings.
Temporal Dynamics: Compression and Stopping
Time on Christmas Eve in North America is experienced as a dramatic compression.
Morning and day are the climax of the "Christmas rush": last-minute gift purchases (especially for men, by stereotype), parking lot battles at shopping centers, roasting turkeys, decorating the home, and packing for the trip. This is a period of peak stress, described in countless comedic plots.
Early evening is a moment of sharp reversal. Around 4-5 PM, stores, banks, and government institutions begin to close. Public life grinds to a halt. A symbolic "silence of the approaching holiday" sets in, when the streets empty, and the main space of life becomes the private home.
Evening and night are the time for family rituals, which, however, begin relatively early (often before midnight), which distinguishes the North American model from the European one, focused on the midnight mass.
Ritual Core: Family Traditions as a Construct
In a multicultural society where there is no dominant ethno-religious force, the concept of "family tradition" (family tradition) becomes a deliberately created and maintained set of practices. These include:
Opening one present on Christmas Eve: A common custom, especially in families with children, allowing to relieve the tension of antici ...
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