Fyren Explained

Editor:Rafael Lindqvist
Editor Title:Editor-in-chief
Category:Satirical magazine
Founded:1898
Finaldate:1922
Country:Finland
Based:Helsinki
Language:Swedish

Fyren (Swedish: The Lighthouse) was a satirical magazine focusing on politics which was published in Helsinki, Finland, between 1898 and 1922. It described itself as a social satire publication which supported free visual and written expressions.

History and profile

Fyren was started in Helsinki in 1898. Rafael Lindqvist was the editor-in-chief of the magazine which targeted educated classes. The magazine declared that it was not interested in party politics.[1] However, it adopted an anti-Semitic and anti-Bolshevik political stance and supported Swedish nationalism and conservatism.[1]

Major contributors of Fyren included the cartoonists Alex Federley, Emil Cedercreutz, Signe Hammarsten-Jansson and Antti Favén.[2] It was subject to strict censorship by the Russian authorities until the independence of Finland in 1917. In addition, a cartoonist of the magazine, Eric Vasström, was imprisoned for three months due to a caricature depicting a Russian noblewoman dancing with a Finnish commoner.[3] [4] The caricature was published after the visit of the Russian royal family to Finland and was regarded as an insult to the Russian royals.[4]

Fyren published a special issue in 1915 to celebrate the 50th birthday of Jean Sibelius which covered cartoons featuring Sibelius.[5]

Tuulispää, another satirical magazine, was the rival of Fyren in regard to the conflict about the use of the Finnish and Swedish languages. The former supported the Finnish language, whereas Fyren was a supporter of the use of the Swedish language.[3] However, the same writers contributed to both titles.[3]

Fyren and Tuulispää sold only 3,000–4,000, but another satirical magazine of the period, Kurikka, managed to sell 20,000 copies.[1]

Fyren ceased publication in 1922 and was replaced by another satirical magazine entitled Blinkfyren which was also edited by Rafael Lindqvist.[6] [7]

Notes and References

  1. Anni Kangas. The Knight, the Beast and the Treasure: a semeiotic inquiry into the Finnish political imaginary on Russia, 1918-1930s. 61,63. University of Tampere. PhD. 2007. 10024/67797.
  2. Encyclopedia: Fyren. Uppslagsverket Finland. sv.
  3. Ainur Elmgren. Visual Stereotypes of Tatars in the Finnish Press from the 1880s to the 1910s. Studia Orientalia Electronica. 8. 2. 2020. 10.23993/store.82942. 26–27. free.
  4. Marja Seliger. Visual Rhetoric in Design Activism. Editora Edgard Blücher. São Paulo. 2014. 10.5151/despro-icdhs2014-0087. 602. free.
  5. Book: Riitta Ojanperä. Hanna-Leena Paloposki. Sibelius and the World of Art. From a Young Genius to a Monument. Ateneum Publications. 2014. https://research.fng.fi/2017/01/25/articles-from-a-young-genius-to-a-monument/. 14. 978-952-7067-11-6. 70. Helsinki.
  6. Web site: Visuell propaganda i Finland 1900-1945. abo.fi. Fred Andersson. 6 April 2014. sv. 7 October 2023.
  7. News: Peter Mickwitz: Blinkfyren och den finlandssvenska fascismen. Förlaget. 1 September 2022. Peter Mickwitz. sv. 7 October 2023.