Libmonster ID: KZ-3707

Christmas and New Year at Sea: Liminal Celebration in the Water Desert


Introduction: A Festival at the Boundary of Worlds

Celebrating Christmas and New Year at sea, whether on a cruise liner, a sailing yacht, or a research vessel, represents a unique socio-cultural and psychological phenomenon. This celebration takes place in a liminal state (from Latin limen — threshold): in a space that is neither solid land-home nor boundless ocean, but a mobile, isolated point on their boundary. Such festivals become not just entertainment, but an intense collective ritual, subject to the special laws of marine subculture and the tasks of maintaining group cohesion in unnatural conditions.

1. Historical Context: From Sea Superstitions to Regulated Rites

The tradition of celebrating at sea dates back to the era of sailing fleets. For sailors spending months and years at sea, these dates were powerful psychological anchors linking them to home. However, their celebration was accompanied by a contradiction.

Superstitions and taboos: Sailors, people extremely superstitious, often feared excessive merriment at sea in order not to “displease” the elements. Noise, singing, laughter could, according to beliefs, attract storms or other misfortunes. Therefore, rituals often had a more subdued, ritualistic character.

"Christmas Truce": There was an unwritten tradition similar to the trench truce during World War I. During the sailing era wars, opposing ships sometimes refrained from attacking on Christmas Eve, following a higher, universal law.

Special ration: The main material embodiment of the holiday was a special treat. On the British fleet in the 18th-19th centuries, a double portion of rum ("above the allowance") was allowed, and the menu included rare delicacies such as salted meat with beans or pudding. This was an act of recognition of the hardships of service.

Interesting fact: Captain James Cook during his first circumnavigation (on the "Endeavour") celebrated Christmas 1768, getting stuck off the coast of Tierra del Fuego. In the ship's log, he wrote: "Christmas was celebrated in the old-fashioned way, with old salted meat and English pudding." For his crew, this was not just a holiday, but a marker of the time passed and the path taken into the unknown.

2. Psychology of an Isolated Group: Intensified Celebration as a Mechanism of Cohesion

In the confined space of a ship, cut off from the familiar social environment, the holiday performs hypertrophied functions:

Compensation for detachment from home: The crew and passengers create a surrogate "land" holiday with maximum intensity. Decorations (garlands on the masts, a tree in the cabin club), a lavish table, gifts are designed to construct an illusion of the familiar world and alleviate nostalgia.

Strengthening vertical and horizontal ties: Rites (joint dinner, greetings from the captain) emphasize the unity of all, from the youngest to the commander, in the face of nature. This is a moment of lowering hierarchical barriers. On passenger liners, the holiday becomes a tool for creating a temporary community ("way nation") among strangers.

Combating monotony and stress: Long watches, the monotony of the sea landscape, hidden tension — the holiday becomes an emotional jolt, a controlled release, breaking the routine and reducing the level of accumulated stress.

3. Specificity of Rites and Symbols on Water

Traditional rituals are adapted to the marine context, acquiring new meanings:

Tree and decorations: The tree on the ship (often artificial due to fire safety rules) is a symbol of life, stability, and connection with the land. It is installed in the most stable and significant place — usually in the cabin club or the main hall of the liner. Decorations often have a marine theme (ships, anchors, star compasses).

Christmas dinner: It has a sacred significance. The table is overflowing with abundance, demonstrating victory over the limitations of ship's stores. Traditionally, the menu includes Christmas pudding or pie, which could be stored on board for months. An important ritual is the toast "To those at sea!", commemorating absent and fallen sailors.

Santa Claus/Ded Moroz: His appearance on the ship is always a theatrical performance. He can descend from the quarterdeck by a lifeboat, "fly" by helicopter, or simply appear on the captain's bridge. His gifts to the crew are often practical (warm clothes, quality tobacco in the past, now — gadgets or prizes).

New Year's Eve: The climax — the midnight whistle (or series of whistles) of all ships in port or within radio range in the open sea. This is a collective sound signal marking the transition of the temporal boundary. The launch of signal rockets or flares replaces the urban fireworks. The first sunrise of the new year has a special meaning — it is greeted on the deck as a symbol of hope and a new stage of navigation.

Example: On atomic icebreakers operating in high latitudes, where in late December there is polar night, New Year's Eve is celebrated in total darkness. The illumination of the ship, searchlights, cutting through the polar night, and signals become an act of symbolic resistance to darkness and cold, an assertion of human presence in the most inhospitable waters of the planet.

4. Crisis Scenarios: Celebration in Extreme Conditions

The social role of the holiday is most vividly manifested in emergency situations:

Scientific expeditions to Antarctica: For polar explorers on winter stations or supply ships, Christmas is a key point in the sequence of "groundhog days." Here, rituals are carefully planned, homemade gifts and scenes are prepared, which is vital psychological support for overcoming isolation and extreme conditions.

Military ships on combat alert: The holiday serves as a powerful moral stimulant. The broadcast of congratulatory speeches from command, concerts from home, the opportunity to send a message to relatives strengthen the sense of connection with the protected homeland. At the same time, combat readiness does not decrease, creating a unique cognitive dissonance between the holiday and service.

Crisis on a cruise liner (technical, sanitary, as in the case of COVID-19 on the "Diamond Princess" liner in 2020): In such conditions, festive rituals organized by the crew for frightened passengers become an act of maintaining order, humanity, and hope, an attempt to preserve normality in the midst of a crisis.

Conclusion: A Floating Model of Society

Celebrating Christmas and New Year on a ship is a compressed and intensified model of how society (at micro and macro scales) uses rituals for survival and maintaining connections. The ocean, as the absolute Other, emphasizes the fragility of human communities, making the holiday not just entertainment, but an act of collective self-affirmation.

This is an experience where geographical isolation is compensated by social cohesion, and the absence of traditional landscape gives rise to new, specific symbols. Such a holiday makes us reconsider the very essence of the celebration: it is not attachment to place, but the ability to create meaning and warmth of human relationships in any, even the most hostile, circumstances. This is a deep metaphor of human civilization as a "ship" sailing through time and storms, where holidays serve as beacons, reminding everyone on board of home, goal, and community.


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Weihnachten und Neujahr auf dem Meer // Astana: Digital Library of Kazakhstan (BIBLIO.KZ). Updated: 14.12.2025. URL: https://biblio.kz/m/articles/view/Weihnachten-und-Neujahr-auf-dem-Meer (date of access: 21.06.2026).

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