Matti Kurikka – a prophet in his own country and abroad

Matti Kurikka (1863-1915) is a multi-dimensional and controversial character in Finnish history. He was a playwright, a journalist, a socialist, a Utopian and a Theosophist, as well as a speaker for free love and women’s rights. Those involved in the research project Fragmented visions. Performance,...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Heimo, Anne, Pollari, Mikko, Rajavuori, Anna, Salmi-Niklander, Kirsti, Seppälä, Mikko-Olavi, Suodenjoki, Sami
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:Finnish
Published: Siirtolaisuusinstituutti 2016
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Online Access:https://siirtolaisuus-migration.journal.fi/article/view/89716
Description
Summary:Matti Kurikka (1863-1915) is a multi-dimensional and controversial character in Finnish history. He was a playwright, a journalist, a socialist, a Utopian and a Theosophist, as well as a speaker for free love and women’s rights. Those involved in the research project Fragmented visions. Performance, authority and interaction in early 20th-century Finnish oral-literary traditions (funded by the Academy of Finland 2014-2017, www.fragvis.net) singled out Matti Kurikka because his life concretizes both ideological tensions and performative practices in late-19th and early-20th-century Finland. Members of the project team presented their research at the FinnForum XI conference in Turku, focusing on the ethnic and transnational aspects of Matti Kurikka’s career. Mikko-Olavi Seppälä concentrated on Matti Kurikka as a playwright; Sami Suodenjoki charted his political shipwreck in 1899; Anne Heimo described his time in Queensland; Mikko Pollari covered his unsuccessful return to Finland in 1905–1909 and his multi-phased transnational career; Anna Rajavuori discussed “kurikkalaisuus” as a label for dubious policies and ideals in the Finnish labor movement; and Kirsti Salmi-Niklander focused on Kurikka’s last years and how he is remembered in the US.