Christmas in the works of Astrid Lindgren (1907-2002) is not just a festive background, but a deep, multifaceted, and often ambivalent image, where the pure wonder of a child's perception collides with material reality, loneliness, poverty, and social injustice. Unlike the idyllic images of Enid Blyton, Lindgren does not create a universal utopia. Her Christmas is a celebration with a crack, where magic exists, but it is fragile and often requires human participation, compassion, and courage.
For many of Lindgren's characters, especially the youngest, the magic of Christmas is something self-evident, a part of the world's structure.
Little and the Wild Swede (1955-1968): For Little (Svanter), waiting for Christmas and gifts is an important part of life. But the key scene in the story "The Wild Swede Who Lived on the Roof, Has Come Back Again" is the meeting of Christmas with the Wild Swede. Their joint decoration of the Christmas tree, despite the mischievous antics (the Wild Swede eats all the treats intended for the tomte — the Swedish house spirit), is a celebration of true, informal, childlike joy over adult formality. The Wild Swede, himself a manifestation of childlike egocentrism and fantasy, becomes the best companion on the holiday. For Lindgren, wonder is not in perfect order, but in freedom and sincerity.
"Emil from Lönneberga" (1963): The Christmas chapters here are full of warmth, but not without irony and humor. The preparation for the holiday in the peasant family is shown through the prism of Emil's pranks, who, despite all his mischievousness, deeply expects a miracle. Lindgren shows Christmas as a family celebration with the mundane, "smelling" specificity (the smell of ham, the preparation of sausages), making the magic earthly and tangible.
Lindgren, who grew up in a farming family and went through hardships, never closes her eyes to the fact that Christmas can be a time not only of joy.
"Ronja, the Robber's Daughter" (1981): This fairy tale does not have a direct Christmas plot, but its main theme — overcoming enmity and the birth of compassion — is the quintessence of the Christmas spirit in the deepest, humanistic sense. The reconciliation of clans through the love of children is the miracle similar to Christmas.
The most poignant embodiment of "dark" Christmas is the story "Christmas in the Cottage of Kattull" (from the cycle about Emil). Here, Lindgren describes not the Christmas of the main character's family, but the Christmas of the servant Alfred and the maid Lina. They have no home of their own, they are poor. Their holiday is a modest meal in a storeroom, but it is filled with such genuine warmth and care for each other that it becomes no less, and perhaps even more genuine, than a rich celebration. Lindgren gently but clearly points out social inequality without destroying the dignity of her characters.
In Lindgren's works, children are not passive recipients of gifts, but often active participants, and sometimes even creators of Christmas magic for others.
"Pippi Longstocking" (1945): Pippi, being an orphan and a social outcast herself, becomes the main giver and organizer of the holiday. Her Christmas party gathers all the children of the town, including the most lonely. She is generous, inventive, and breaks all conventions. Her celebration is a festival of boundless childlike generosity and fantasy over boring adult rules. Pippi saves Christmas from routine.
Madicken from Ynnabacken (1960): Madicken and her sister Liza sincerely believe in magic, but their belief is active. They prepare gifts, try to help others (such as a lonely neighbor). Their Christmas is a process of creating goodness, in which they play a key role.
In some of Lindgren's works, Christmas becomes a moment of existential insight, a confrontation with the harsh truth of life.
"The Brothers Lionheart" (1973): At the beginning of the novel, the terminally ill younger brother Jonathan comforts his brother Karl (Rasmus) before Christmas by telling him a fairy tale about Nangia, a country where they will go after death. The pre-Christmas time here is colored with tragedy, fear of death, and inevitable parting. But the story of Nangia becomes a kind of "Christmas promise" — a promise of a miracle of another order, a miracle of post-mortem reunion and adventure. This Christmas is devoid of domestic comfort, but filled with metaphysical hope.
Lindgren subtly conveys the national color of Swedish Christmas (jul):
The figure of jul tomte (Christmas gnome/house spirit), not Santa Claus. This is an older spirit connected with the home and the farm, who brings gifts. He is closer to nature and the family hearth, reflecting Lindgren's idea of the holiday as a home, intimate event.
Culture of cosiness (mys). Not only gifts are important, but also the atmosphere: the light of candles, the smell of gingerbread (pepparkakor), joint reading or singing. Lindgren sings the praises of this simple, non-materialist joy.
For Astrid Lindgren, Christmas is not a state of peace, but a state of the soul that can and should be created even in imperfect circumstances. Her position is far from sweet optimism and cynicism.
The magic is real, but it lives not in commerce, but in childlike fantasy, in the readiness to believe and create.
The holiday does not cancel social problems, but can highlight them and, ideally, become a reason for the manifestation of human solidarity (as in Pippi's story or in the story about Alfred and Lina).
The main miracle is not the received gift, but the given one. The active goodness of a child (or an adult who has preserved a childlike soul, like the Wild Swede) is the highest manifestation of the Christmas spirit.
Thus, Astrid Lindgren does not just describe Christmas — she incorporates it into her humanistic philosophy, where childhood is sacred, justice is necessary, and imagination is a saving force. Her Christmas is a celebration with open eyes, where wonder is all the more valuable because it breaks through the thickness of real difficulties, and all the stronger because its source often turns out to be the purest and most daring creature on earth — a child.
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