Enid Blyton on Christmas: A Conservative Utopia in Cardboard Packaging
In the works of Enid Blyton (1897-1968), the most popular children's author of the 20th century, Christmas occupies a special, but strictly defined place. It is not the theme of separate novels, but an unchanging, repetitive decorative and moral backdrop, an element of her ideal worldview. Blyton's Christmas is not a religious mystery or a time of family conflicts, but a completed model of an ideal social order, the embodiment of conservative, post-war British middle-class values, wrapped in a bright, sweet, and absolutely safe wrapper.
Chronotope of idyll: Christmas as a space of safe wonder
The action of most of Blyton's books ("The Famous Five", "The Five Find-Outers", "The Secret Seven") takes place during school holidays, and winter holidays are their logical climax. However, Blyton herself rarely makes Christmas the central event of the intrigue. Rather, it is a reward, a final chord after the mystery is unraveled.
"The Five on Treasure Island" (1942): The story ends just before Christmas, and the Quinn family, joining their friends George and her cousins, prepares for the holiday at Kirrin Hall. This is not just an ending, but a symbol of the restoration of order and family unity after summer adventures. Adventures were a test, Christmas was a reward for loyalty and bravery.
Christmas in the "Christmas Stories" series (e.g., collections from the 1940s): Here, the holiday often serves as a decisive moment for correcting "bad" children or resolving minor family disputes. The magic has a didactic character: Santa, elves, or just a kind adult reward the obedient and generous and gently point out the mistakes of disobedient and greedy ones.
Social model: hierarchy, generosity, and clear boundaries
Blyton, being a daughter of the Victorian era, reproduces a strict but cozy social hierarchy in her Christmas scenes.
Family as a closed fortress: The holiday always takes place in the circle of one's ...
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