"You Were Born with a Giant Silver Spoon in Your Mouth": Geography, the Young, and Social Class in Finnish Films in the 2000S




Römpötti T

PublisherCentre for Research in Young Peoples' Text and Cultures

2020

Jeunesse

JEUNESSE-YOUNG PEOPLE TEXTS CULTURES

12

2

62

85

24

1920-2601

https://jeunessejournal.ca/index.php/yptc/article/view/550



In several Finnish films of the 2000s, Finland is portrayed as divided geographically into two parts: the small urban area around Finland's capital, Helsinki, in the south and the rural areas in the country's north. This polarization frames conceptualizations of social class, particularly in films that depict young people leaving their homes. Forbidden Fruit (Kielletty hedelma) and August (Elokuu) are examples of Finnish cinema in the 2000s that negotiate ideas about class and circulate this polarized imagination through geography. Both films depict the young leaving their homes and then clashing with a geographically marked border. The films are analyzed in the context of the neo-liberal success story which defines the ideal subject of contemporary society. The article argues that the cinematic journeys of the young show the power of geography in reproducing class structures.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 17:51