Compare And Contrast Christmas And Opera

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Christmas and Opera did not merely seem to correlate, but understanding where the two events derived from can help one to understand the similarities and differences between them. The development of Christmas was different from the creation of opera because the working class was controlling the other social classes for profit. Whereas for opera, the different social classes unified to keep opera as entertainment and not a social event. Another difference came within the writing and context throughout the article and the presentation of information conveyed by the author. Yet the events share the similarity of both being refined and reinvented. The main difference between the invention of Christmas and the invention of the Opera was found …show more content…

Both taking place in the nineteenth century Christmas and opera were both reinvented and redefined. In the beginning of the nineteenth century, Christmas was not an event in which people would want to take part in. Throughout the first 26 years of the nineteenth-century, people worked on Christmas and stores were open. There were not magazines or newspapers that referred to December twenty-fifth. From the nineteenth century to the twenty-first major changes occurred that made Christmas an event that people waited for its arrival. It was not until 1826 that people recognized Christmas wasn 't being practiced nor was it being discerned by society. Therefore, it would be implemented that stores would be closed and it became a holiday for workers. This first move to make Christmas an event was the turning point which was then followed by the commercialism of selling material goods. Towards the end of the nineteenth century, the creation of Scrooge reminded the upper class to give to the lower class. The Author, Charles Dickens gave caution to society and it was the recognized that Christmas was supposed to be about giving to charity and sharing the wealth among classes. In contrast, opera was much the same as its reinvention was not for it to just to be entertaining but to become an art. The transformation from opera being a social event to became a place were classes of different social standings integrated, where it finally proceeded to grew into an art form, where it could be appreciated for its cultural aspects and pure talent. Opera was not appreciated in the early nineteenth century and by the end, it was soon transformed, becoming appreciated as an art form just as how Christmas not recognized nor celebrated but soon became a large part of modern-day

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