How Nostalgia Led to the Invention of the First Christmas Card

An illustration by artist Randolph Caldecott summarizing the range of ‘old English Christmas traditions.’
An illustration by artist Randolph Caldecott summarizing the range of ‘old English Christmas traditions.’
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An illustration by artist Randolph Caldecott summarizing the range of ‘old English Christmas traditions.’
An illustration by artist Randolph Caldecott summarizing the range of ‘old English Christmas traditions.’
How Nostalgia Led to the Invention of the First Christmas Card
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It’s a common seasonal refrain: “Christmas just isn’t like it used to be.”

This is not a new complaint. History shows that Christmas traditions are just as subject to change as any other aspect of human societies, and when customs change, there are always some who wish they could turn back the clock.

In the 1830s, the English solicitor William Sandys compiled a host of examples of Britons bemoaning the transformation of Christmas customs from earlier eras. Sandys himself was especially concerned about the decline of public caroling, noting the practice appeared “to get more neglected every year.” He worried that this “neglect” was indicative of a wider British tendency to observe Christmas with less “hospitality and innocent revelry” in the 19th century than in the past.

Yet the 19th century also produced new holiday customs. In fact, many of the new Christmas practices in Sandy’s time went on to become established traditions themselves – and are now the subject of nostalgia and fretted over by those who fear their decline. Take, for example, the humble Christmas card. My research shows that these printed seasonal greetings borrowed from the customs of the past to move Christmas into a new age.

Read the full article on The Conversation.

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