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Jälleenrakentamisen narratiivit ja niiden muotoutuminen Suomen lehdistössä 1944–1945
Author(s) -
Antero Holmila
Publication year - 2008
Publication title -
elore
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1456-3010
DOI - 10.30666/elore.78743
Subject(s) - normative , meaning (existential) , narrative , sacrifice , sociology , gender studies , political science , epistemology , history , law , literature , philosophy , art , archaeology
This article examines the transition from war to peace in Finland between 1944 and 1945 from the perspective of the Finnish press. It argues that the culturally constructed and symbolically ordered narratives of “survival”, “sacrifice” and “self-control” made up a normative framework in which the meaning of Finland’s post-war transition from war to peace was given. In addition, the framework offered the Finns moral guidelines and lessons from the past as what to do in order to successfully return to peace. Exploring these perceptions from a theoretical framework in which narratives are placed into the core of cultural structure and practice, it is argued that the press created a homogenous meaning for the immediate postwar reconstruction which the majority of the society understood in a homogenous way.

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