Kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät Neuvosto-Karjalassa

My article is a study of Finnish literary activities in Soviet Karelia. I analyze what kinds of meanings were ascribed to the descriptions of localities, folk poetry and oral tradition in the literary discussions in Soviet Karelia from the late 1950s to the 1970s. I also examine the descriptions and...

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Published in:Elore
Main Author: Kurki, Tuulikki
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Finnish
Published: Suomen Kansantietouden Tutkijain Seura 2004
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journal.fi/elore/article/view/78456
https://doi.org/10.30666/elore.78456
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spelling fttsvojs:oai:journal.fi:article/78456 2023-05-15T18:06:27+02:00 Kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät Neuvosto-Karjalassa Kurki, Tuulikki 2004-12-01 text/html https://journal.fi/elore/article/view/78456 https://doi.org/10.30666/elore.78456 fin fin Suomen Kansantietouden Tutkijain Seura https://journal.fi/elore/article/view/78456/39355 https://journal.fi/elore/article/view/78456 doi:10.30666/elore.78456 Elore; Vol 11 Nro 2 (2004): Sukupuoli – moninaista kulttuurintutkimusta Elore; Vol 11 No 2 (2004): Sukupuoli – moninaista kulttuurintutkimusta Elore; Vol 11 Nr 2 (2004): Sukupuoli – moninaista kulttuurintutkimusta 1456-3010 info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion Vertaisarvioitu artikkeli 2004 fttsvojs https://doi.org/10.30666/elore.78456 2020-05-29T23:25:56Z My article is a study of Finnish literary activities in Soviet Karelia. I analyze what kinds of meanings were ascribed to the descriptions of localities, folk poetry and oral tradition in the literary discussions in Soviet Karelia from the late 1950s to the 1970s. I also examine the descriptions and interpretations of folk and local traditions that were politically or ideologically authorized and those that were suppressed. Theoretically, this article is connected to the discussion of power relations that exist in writing about people, tradition, and localities. The research material includes prose published in Finnish, the Communist Party’s literary programs, literary reviews and theoretical articles published in literary journals. It also includes materials from the National Archive of the Republic of Karelia. The literary descriptions of folklore and locality appear as areas of competing articulations of meaning. In the literary discussions they were connected to the writers’ own era, the changing present and the ideologically relevant Soviet history. They were also representations of Karelia’s past, its heritage, and local history, all of which were regarded as “inappropriate” interpretations of locality. My article is a study of Finnish literary activities in Soviet Karelia. I analyze what kinds of meanings were ascribed to the descriptions of localities, folk poetry and oral tradition in the literary discussions in Soviet Karelia from the late 1950s to the 1970s. I also examine the descriptions and interpretations of folk and local traditions that were politically or ideologically authorized and those that were suppressed. Theoretically, this article is connected to the discussion of power relations that exist in writing about people, tradition, and localities. The research material includes prose published in Finnish, the Communist Party’s literary programs, literary reviews and theoretical articles published in literary journals. It also includes materials from the National Archive of the Republic of Karelia. The literary descriptions of folklore and locality appear as areas of competing articulations of meaning. In the literary discussions they were connected to the writers’ own era, the changing present and the ideologically relevant Soviet history. They were also representations of Karelia’s past, its heritage, and local history, all of which were regarded as “inappropriate” interpretations of locality. Article in Journal/Newspaper Republic of Karelia Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online Elore 11 2
institution Open Polar
collection Federation of Finnish Learned Societies: Scientific Journals Online
op_collection_id fttsvojs
language Finnish
description My article is a study of Finnish literary activities in Soviet Karelia. I analyze what kinds of meanings were ascribed to the descriptions of localities, folk poetry and oral tradition in the literary discussions in Soviet Karelia from the late 1950s to the 1970s. I also examine the descriptions and interpretations of folk and local traditions that were politically or ideologically authorized and those that were suppressed. Theoretically, this article is connected to the discussion of power relations that exist in writing about people, tradition, and localities. The research material includes prose published in Finnish, the Communist Party’s literary programs, literary reviews and theoretical articles published in literary journals. It also includes materials from the National Archive of the Republic of Karelia. The literary descriptions of folklore and locality appear as areas of competing articulations of meaning. In the literary discussions they were connected to the writers’ own era, the changing present and the ideologically relevant Soviet history. They were also representations of Karelia’s past, its heritage, and local history, all of which were regarded as “inappropriate” interpretations of locality. My article is a study of Finnish literary activities in Soviet Karelia. I analyze what kinds of meanings were ascribed to the descriptions of localities, folk poetry and oral tradition in the literary discussions in Soviet Karelia from the late 1950s to the 1970s. I also examine the descriptions and interpretations of folk and local traditions that were politically or ideologically authorized and those that were suppressed. Theoretically, this article is connected to the discussion of power relations that exist in writing about people, tradition, and localities. The research material includes prose published in Finnish, the Communist Party’s literary programs, literary reviews and theoretical articles published in literary journals. It also includes materials from the National Archive of the Republic of Karelia. The literary descriptions of folklore and locality appear as areas of competing articulations of meaning. In the literary discussions they were connected to the writers’ own era, the changing present and the ideologically relevant Soviet history. They were also representations of Karelia’s past, its heritage, and local history, all of which were regarded as “inappropriate” interpretations of locality.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Kurki, Tuulikki
spellingShingle Kurki, Tuulikki
Kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät Neuvosto-Karjalassa
author_facet Kurki, Tuulikki
author_sort Kurki, Tuulikki
title Kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät Neuvosto-Karjalassa
title_short Kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät Neuvosto-Karjalassa
title_full Kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät Neuvosto-Karjalassa
title_fullStr Kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät Neuvosto-Karjalassa
title_full_unstemmed Kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät Neuvosto-Karjalassa
title_sort kansanomaisuus, kirjallisuus ja merkityskytkennät neuvosto-karjalassa
publisher Suomen Kansantietouden Tutkijain Seura
publishDate 2004
url https://journal.fi/elore/article/view/78456
https://doi.org/10.30666/elore.78456
genre Republic of Karelia
genre_facet Republic of Karelia
op_source Elore; Vol 11 Nro 2 (2004): Sukupuoli – moninaista kulttuurintutkimusta
Elore; Vol 11 No 2 (2004): Sukupuoli – moninaista kulttuurintutkimusta
Elore; Vol 11 Nr 2 (2004): Sukupuoli – moninaista kulttuurintutkimusta
1456-3010
op_relation https://journal.fi/elore/article/view/78456/39355
https://journal.fi/elore/article/view/78456
doi:10.30666/elore.78456
op_doi https://doi.org/10.30666/elore.78456
container_title Elore
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