Christmas Table at Ivan Shmelev: The Sacral Banquet as the Embodiment of "The Lord's Summer"
In Ivan Shmelev's book "The Lord's Summer" (1933-1948), the Christmas table is not just a sumptuous feast but a complex religious-cultural cosmos, a material embodiment of the liturgical year, family memory, and popular eschatology. Through its description, Shmelev reconstructs a holistic world of pre-revolutionary Orthodox life, where each dish is not just food but a symbol, a sign, a part of a sacred ritual. The table becomes an altar on which the feast of Incarnation is performed, accessible to taste, smell, and sight.
Sacred Geography and the Symbolism of Dishes
The preparation and the feast itself are structured according to strict laws, where everything matters.
Christmas Eve (December 24 / January 6) — a feast of anticipation.The main dish — kutia (grain porridge):
Composition: Compot (fruit and berry syrup) made from dried fruits and berries, to which cooked wheat grains, honey, poppy seeds, and nuts are added.
Symbols: Grains — resurrection and eternal life (as a seed sown in the earth). Honey — sweetness and joy of the Heavenly Kingdom. Poppy seeds and nuts — abundance and prosperity. This is a post-fast, but rich food, which prepares the body and spirit for the feast. "Until the first star" one cannot eat — this is a remembrance of the Star of Bethlehem, and the joint meal after its appearance — an act of communal anticipation and meeting.
The Christmas feast — the feast of Incarnation.After the night liturgy, the time for the meal comes, and the table is transformed. This is no longer a fast but a feast of the flesh, permitted by God, for Christ took human flesh.
Baked pork/pig/goose: The center of the table. "The little piglet roasts with horseradish, with a pausky kutia...". This is a symbol of sacrifice and festive fullness. Its mandatory presence is a echo of the ancient tradition of the sacrificial animal, transformed in the Christian context.
Cold snacks a ...
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