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Minority Networking Behind the Iron Curtain: The Petrozavodsk Finnish Theater and Finland, 1965–1985 |
| Tartalom: | https://real.mtak.hu/237773/ |
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| Archívum: | REAL |
| Gyűjtemény: |
Status = Published
Subject = D History General and Old World / történelem: DK Russia, Soviet Union, Former Soviet Republics / Oroszország Subject = N Fine Arts / képzőművészet: N Visual arts (General) For photography, see TR / vizuális művészet általában Subject = D History General and Old World / történelem: DL Northern Europe, Scandinavia / Észak-Európa, Skandinávia Type = Article |
| Cím: |
Minority Networking Behind the Iron Curtain: The Petrozavodsk Finnish Theater and Finland, 1965–1985
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| Létrehozó: |
Mikkonen, Simo
Ikonen, Sampo
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| Dátum: |
2026
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| Téma: |
DK Russia, Soviet Union, Former Soviet Republics / Oroszország
DL Northern Europe, Scandinavia / Észak-Európa, Skandinávia
N Visual arts (General) For photography, see TR / vizuális művészet általában
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| Tartalmi leírás: |
This article examines the role of the Petrozavodsk Finnish Theater (PFT) in cultural exchanges between Finland and the Soviet Union from 1965 to 1985. As the only professional Finnish-language theater outside Finland, PFT occupied a unique position within Soviet cultural diplomacy. Despite lacking the prestige of major ensembles and the ideological weight of propaganda groups, PFT was allowed to tour Finland six times, an exceptional frequency for a Soviet troupe. These tours not only introduced Finnish audiences to a little-known minority theater but also gave PFT access to new plays, professional contacts, and opportunities to sustain Finnish-language culture in the context of Russification. Drawing on interviews, Finnish archival sources, and the diary of theater actor and cultural administrator William Hall, this article highlights both the official frameworks and the informal networks that shaped these exchanges. While the Soviet state sought to showcase its nationality policy, PFT artists used the exchanges to pursue their own goals: artistic renewal, language preservation, and community survival. This study situates PFT within the broader history of Cold War cultural diplomacy, showing how a peripheral minority institution could leverage international contacts to carve out cultural space. PFT’s story illustrates the entanglement of politics, identity, and theater across the Iron Curtain.
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| Nyelv: |
angol
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| Típus: |
Article
PeerReviewed
info:eu-repo/semantics/article
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| Formátum: |
text
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| Azonosító: |
Mikkonen, Simo and Ikonen, Sampo (2026) Minority Networking Behind the Iron Curtain: The Petrozavodsk Finnish Theater and Finland, 1965–1985. HUNGARIAN HISTORICAL REVIEW: NEW SERIES OF ACTA HISTORICA ACADEMIAE SCIENTIARIUM HUNGARICAE, 15 (1). pp. 90-115. ISSN 2063-8647
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| Kapcsolat: |
MTMT:37105335 10.38145/2026.1.90
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