Art by Bascove
Art by Bascove

Link: Ghosts at Christmas: Dickens to Davies

Charles Dickens gets the credit for the idea of a ghost story at Christmas. We all know Scrooge, whether it’s Alastair Sim, Bill Murray, Patrick Stewart, or Fred Flintstone. The only problem is that Dickens didn’t invent it. I would even go so far as to say he tried to hi-jack the idea and turn it to his own purposes: making money and instruction. I could be wrong. But Dickens wouldn’t be the first person to realize that Christmas is a cash cow.


The telling of a winter’s tale, a gory or fantastic story around a merry fire in the depths of the dark, cold season, is as old at least as Shakespeare. He couldn’t have written the play The Winter’s Tale (1623) if it had not existed. By it’s very title, we know the story will not be realistic and offer a happy ending. But old Willy didn’t invent it either. The tradition goes back into time wherever there were people living in northern climes and had some form of forced inactivity imposed on them. The last remnants of this tradition in North America is the campfire tale that is so often featured in movies, just before the madman starts cutting up teenagers.

Read the rest:

https://www.michaelmay.online/2015/12/ghosts-at-christmas-dickens-to-davies.html

 

Click on the image!