Garm
Categories
  • Satirical magazine
  • Political magazine
FrequencyMonthly
FounderHenry Rein
Founded1923
Final issue1953
CountryFinland
Based inHelsinki
LanguageSwedish

Garm was a 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 satirical magazine published 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 Garm supported 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 when its founder Henry Rein died.[1][3]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 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.
  2. 1 2 3 4 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. hdl:10024/67797. ISBN 978-951-44-7157-5.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 "Tove Jansson's work at satire magazine Garm". Moomin. 10 March 2014. Archived from the original on 4 May 2021. Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  4. Kikka Rytkönen. "Black Moomins". Antimilitaristi (in Finnish). Retrieved 12 September 2021.
  5. 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.
  6. 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; Boston: De Gruyter. p. 118. doi:10.1515/9783110285444.114. ISBN 978-3-1102-8537-6.
  7. 1 2 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.
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