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Kalevala. The national epic of Finland John Martin Crawford, 1888 |
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There are 9 critical essays on Kalevala.
Critical Essays on Kalevala

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Critical Essay by William A. Wilson
9,831 words, approx. 33 pages
 In the following excerpt, Wilson takes a critical look at the historical relationship between Finnish nationalist politics and the study of the Kalevala.
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Critical Essay by Lauri Honko
2,841 words, approx. 10 pages
 In the following excerpt, originally published in 1960, Honko discusses the cultural milieu in which the Kalevala was compiled and reviews the course of its subsequent study.
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Critical Essay by Senni Timonen
2,837 words, approx. 10 pages
 In the following excerpt, Timonen examines the contributions made to Lönnrot' s conception of the Kalevala by some of the principal singers of Finnish folk poems from whom he collected his material.
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Critical Essay by Kai Laitinen
2,722 words, approx. 9 pages
 In the following excerpt, Laitinen examines the influence of the Kalevala on the development of Finnish literature and of a Finnish national identity.
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Critical Essay by Keith Bosley
2,200 words, approx. 7 pages
 In the following essay, written while he was in the process of translating the Kalevala into English, Bosley reflects on the special challenges and responsibilities inherent in that task.
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Critical Essay by Robert Harbison
1,897 words, approx. 6 pages
 In the following excerpt, Harbison comments on the absence of a clear scholarly, idealistic, or artistic focus in the Kalevala
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Critical Essay by John B. Alphonso-Karkala
1,891 words, approx. 6 pages
 In the following excerpt, Alphonso-Karkala examines the symbolic implications of Väinämöinen's quest to obtain three magic words from the giant Antero Vipunen in the Kalevala
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Critical Essay by Elias Lönnrot
1,278 words, approx. 4 pages
 In the following excerpt from his preface to the first edition of the Kalevala, later known as the Old Kalevala, Lönnrot discusses the nature of the poems and the way in which he compiled and organized them.

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