Garm (magazine)
Categories | Satirical magazine Political magazine |
---|---|
Frequency | Monthly |
Founder | Henry Rein |
Year founded | 1923 |
Final issue | 1953 |
Country | Finland |
Based in | Helsinki |
Language | Swedish |
Garm was a Swedish language monthly political and satirical magazine published in Helsinki, Finland. The magazine existed for thirty years from 1923 to 1953. The title of the magazine is a reference to a character in the Norse mythology, a monstrous hound which defended the entrance to Helheim, the Norse realm of the dead.[1]
History and profile[]
Garm was established in 1923 as a successor of Kerberos which was also a Swedish language satirical magazine in Finland.[2][3] The founder was Henry Rein.[3] The magazine was published in Helsinki on a monthly basis.[4][5] It had a conservative political stance like its predecessor.[2] However, unlike Kerberos Garm opposed both the nationalism in the form of true Finnishness and the extreme leftist politics.[2] In addition, although the magazine was among the supporters of the Swedish language and culture in Finland, it did not call for the cooperation with Sweden.[2] The magazine mocked both Communism and Nazism during World War II.[1]
Garm's readers were mostly politicians, celebrities, and other leading figures.[1] Tito Colliander and Jarl Hemmer were among the Garm contributors.[1] One of the most significant contributors of Garm was Tove Jansson who started her career in the magazine as a cartoonist in 1929 when she was just fifteen.[3][6] Tove Jansson's mother, Signe Hammarsten-Jansson, also worked at the magazine from its start in 1923.[3] Over time the former became the magazine's chief illustrator.[7] Some characters in her Moomin cartoon strips first appeared in the magazine.[1] Jansson's political cartoons ridiculing Adolf Hitler and Josef Stalin published in Garm were censored by the Finnish authorities.[7] Garm folded in 1953 following the death of Henry Rein who launched the magazine.[1][3]
References[]
- ^ a b c d e f Ant O’Neill (2017). "Moominvalley Fossils: Translating the Early Comics of Tove Jansson". Bookbird: A Journal of International Children's Literature. 55 (2): 52. doi:10.1353/bkb.2017.0023. ISSN 0006-7377. S2CID 151535137.
- ^ a b c d Anni Kangas (2007). The Knight, the Beast and the Treasure: a semeiotic inquiry into the Finnish political imaginary on Russia, 1918-1930s (PhD thesis). University of Tampere. pp. 62, 64. ISBN 978-951-44-7157-5.
- ^ a b c d e "Tove Jansson's work at satire magazine Garm". Moomin. 10 March 2014. Archived from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ Kikka Rytkönen. "Black Moomins". Antimilitaristi (in Finnish). Retrieved 12 September 2021.
- ^ Tapio Markkanen (Spring 2016). "Echoes of Cosmic Events and Global Politics in Moominvalley: Cosmic and Astronomical Sources of Incitement in Tove Jansson's Comet in Moominland". Acta Baltica Historiae et Philosophiae Scientiarum. 4 (1): 41–69. doi:10.11590/abhps.2016.1.02. hdl:10138/233362.
- ^ Elina Druker (2012). "Mapping absence. Maps as meta-artistic discourse in literature". In Leif Dahlberg (ed.). Visualizing Law and Authority. Essays on Legal Aesthetics. Berlin and Boston: De Gruyter. p. 118. doi:10.1515/9783110285444.114. ISBN 978-3-1102-8537-6.
- ^ a b Hallie Wells (2019). "Between discretion and disclosure: Queer (e)labor(ations) in the work of Tove Jansson and Audre Lorde". Journal of Lesbian Studies. 23 (2): 233. doi:10.1080/10894160.2019.1520550. PMID 30632943. S2CID 58627968.
External links[]
- Media related to Garm (magazine) at Wikimedia Commons
- 1923 establishments in Finland
- 1953 disestablishments in Finland
- Censorship in Finland
- Conservatism in Finland
- Conservative magazines
- Cultural magazines
- Defunct political magazines published in Finland
- Finnish political satire
- Magazines established in 1923
- Magazines disestablished in 1953
- Magazines published in Helsinki
- Monthly magazines published in Finland
- Satirical magazines
- Swedish-language magazines