6533b827fe1ef96bd1286599

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Post memory and cinematic affect in The Midwife

Kaisa HiltunenNina Sääskilahti

subject

Cultural Studieslcsh:BH1-301LappiVisual Arts and Performing ArtsLapland WarLapin sota0507 social and economic geographyAppealContext (language use)elokuvatlcsh:AestheticsGermanSuomilocalKätilömuistaminenSociologySet (psychology)The Midwifelcsh:NX1-82005 social sciencesWorld War IIMedia studiesFinnish cinemaGender studies06 humanities and the artslcsh:Arts in general060202 literary studiesglobaltoinen maailmansotaRomancelanguage.human_languageSecond World WarPhilosophyaffectpost memoryta61310602 languages and literaturelanguagePerformance artaffects050703 geographyNexus (standard)

description

The Second World War has proved a rich source of inspiration for fiction films worldwide. The Finnish fiction film The Midwife (Kätilö, Antti J. Jokinen, 2015) is aimed at an international audience with a story that takes place in the context of the Lapland War in Finland in 1944. The film tells of a romantic relationship between a local woman and a member of the German army, in a highly affective manner. This article argues that the film downplays elements that might have interested the national, or local, audience, and that it privileges affect over knowledge. To bring out the film’s transnational character, the article begins by analysing it in the context of national, or local, and global influences and argues that the film’s decontextualised, deterritorialised, and denationalised nature can be a result of its desire to appeal to a wide audience; yet a set of tensions and paradoxes are identified that bring out the complexities of the local–global nexus. The article goes on to ask whether the affectivity emphasised in The Midwife could have been a means to produce a story that communicates across borders. The article also explores whether affectivity can be a way to create a meaningful connection to the past in the current era of post memory (Aleida Assmann). Analysis of the film’s aesthetic and narrative devices is combined with cultural analysis of the contemporary memory and media culture and its global flows. peerReviewed

http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:jyu-201704031865