Community-Building Tools for New Year's and Christmas: Rituals, Narratives, and Practices of Community Construction
Introduction: The Festival as a Social Constructor
New Year's and Christmas are not just calendar events but powerful social technologies aimed at temporarily enhancing integration, solidarity, and a sense of belonging in different scales of collectives — from family and local communities to nations and a globalized world. These holidays activate a set of specific tools (rituals, narratives, material practices) that work to overcome social atomization, resolve conflicts, and consolidate collective identity. Their effectiveness is based on repetition, emotional charge, and the ability to create a "common experienced present."
1. Ritual Synchronizers: Creating a Collective "We" Through Joint Action
The key function is to synchronize the behavior of large masses of people, giving rise to the phenomenon of collective affect and the illusion (or reality) of unity.
Exactly defined time markers. The chime of the clock, the countdown to midnight, the Christmas mass at a certain hour. These moments serve as points of universal synchronization when millions of people simultaneously perform the same action (shouting "Hooray!", raising glasses, making wishes, lighting candles). This forms a powerful sense of participation in a major event.
Ritual practices at the table. A joint meal (a festive dinner) is an archaic and basic tool for cohesion. Sharing food symbolically means sharing fate and trust. Specific dishes (olivie, Christmas goose, cookies) become gastronomic markers of community. Ritual toasts, the exchange of gifts during the meal, strengthen this connection.
Collective singing. The performance of national anthems ("Shchedryk" in Ukraine, "Auld Lang Syne" in English-speaking countries), carols, or even watching and collectively quoting a film ("The Irony of Fate, or With a Light Heart!" in Russia) create a common symbolic and emotional space.
2. Narrati ...
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