Kalevalaic runosinging is a Baltic-Finnic tradition of metered oral poetry. In Finland, runo singing and the national epic Kalevala based on this tradition are often seen − especially in public speech − as nationally significant symbols of Finnishness. In this article, I examine how the idea of the Finnishness of traditional runo songs has been constructed in the changing paradigms of studying and performing folk music and oral poetry in Finland across the last hundred years, and how the concept of cultural appropriation relates to this. I will concentrate on early Finnish folk music studies as well as on the contemporary Finnish folk music scene; I tie these fields together by following the circulation of an Ingrian runosong theme called O...
Contemporary Finnish folk music, unlike internationally successful contemporary Finnish rock (HIM, N...
The Finnish epic poem Kalevala (18491) is a written transcription leaning mainly on a collection of ...
The Folklore Archives are the central holdings for oral tradition research in Finland. The actual co...
In this study, then, I propose to examine one of Vihtoora Lesonen's Kalevala-derived songs with an e...
Listening to historical oral poetry usually means listening to archival sound recordings with no pos...
Kalevala-metric oral poetry comprises various genres, from epic and lyric to ritual poetry, dancing ...
This thesis focuses on the adaptation of the Kalevala (1849) – Finland’s national epic –, and other ...
The text for Kalevala Songs is taken from The Kalevala, an epic poem of the Finnish people, translat...
The aim of this article is twofold: to introduce the Ingrian poetic singing culture, which is often ...
This article explores the lyrics of the Finnish folk duo Kalevauva.fi. The duo uses extracts from on...
Artikkeli tarkastelee suomenkielisen runouden ja kirjallistumisen historiaa vernakulaarin käsitteen ...
The author analyses the origin of the Kalevala in the context of National Romanticism and earlier et...
The article examines two recently published Finnish books, Juha Hurme’s Niemi (2017) and Risto Isomä...
A work about Finnish 19th century history, published in 1973, is entitled Kansakunta löytää itsensä ...
Lisään myöhemminThe article examines two recently published Finnish books, Juha Hurme’s Niemi (2017)...
Contemporary Finnish folk music, unlike internationally successful contemporary Finnish rock (HIM, N...
The Finnish epic poem Kalevala (18491) is a written transcription leaning mainly on a collection of ...
The Folklore Archives are the central holdings for oral tradition research in Finland. The actual co...
In this study, then, I propose to examine one of Vihtoora Lesonen's Kalevala-derived songs with an e...
Listening to historical oral poetry usually means listening to archival sound recordings with no pos...
Kalevala-metric oral poetry comprises various genres, from epic and lyric to ritual poetry, dancing ...
This thesis focuses on the adaptation of the Kalevala (1849) – Finland’s national epic –, and other ...
The text for Kalevala Songs is taken from The Kalevala, an epic poem of the Finnish people, translat...
The aim of this article is twofold: to introduce the Ingrian poetic singing culture, which is often ...
This article explores the lyrics of the Finnish folk duo Kalevauva.fi. The duo uses extracts from on...
Artikkeli tarkastelee suomenkielisen runouden ja kirjallistumisen historiaa vernakulaarin käsitteen ...
The author analyses the origin of the Kalevala in the context of National Romanticism and earlier et...
The article examines two recently published Finnish books, Juha Hurme’s Niemi (2017) and Risto Isomä...
A work about Finnish 19th century history, published in 1973, is entitled Kansakunta löytää itsensä ...
Lisään myöhemminThe article examines two recently published Finnish books, Juha Hurme’s Niemi (2017)...
Contemporary Finnish folk music, unlike internationally successful contemporary Finnish rock (HIM, N...
The Finnish epic poem Kalevala (18491) is a written transcription leaning mainly on a collection of ...
The Folklore Archives are the central holdings for oral tradition research in Finland. The actual co...