Copyright

Gunnel Biskop

Published On

2024-04-25

Page Range

pp. 177–228

Language

  • English

Print Length

52 pages

6. The Minuet in Finland after 1800

  • Gunnel Biskop (author)
The chapter examines the minuet as a popular dance form among Finland's Swedish-speaking population, especially in Ostrobothnia. The minuet was on the one hand a common dance in local villages and on the other hand a ceremonial dance at rural weddings. The chapter goes through the Swedish-speaking regions in detail and presents the current knowledge about the minuet’s position from the early 1800s until the present in each of them. Also, the Finnish-speaking regions are presented, but the minuet probably had a minor role in their dance culture, and the amount of information about the minuet is remarkably smaller there.

Contributors

Gunnel Biskop

(author)

Gunnel Biskop born in Karleby in Ostrobothnia in Finland is a retired editor from Kemira Ltd in Helsinki (1968–2003). From a young age she has participated in a folk dance group and has danced all the traditional minuets recorded in Finland. She is on the board of Finlands Svenska Folkdansring. Alongside her full-time work she studied folklore and ethnology at Åbo Akademi university and finished a Master of Art 1990. In the field of dance, she has published five books and participated in fifteen anthologies and written over a hundred articles. Her PhD thesis is called Dansen för åskådare. Intresset för folkdansen som estradprodukt och insamlingsobjekt hos den svenskspråkiga befolkningen i Finland under senare delen av 1800-talet (Åbo Akademi 2012) (Dance for an audience. The interest in folk dance as a stage product and object of dance collecting among Swedish-speakers in Finland during the latter half of the 19th century). Her book Menuetten – älsklingsdansen. Om menuetten i Norden – särskilt i Finlands svenskbygder – under trehundrafemtio år (The Minuet – The loved Dance. About the minuet in the Nordic region – especially in the swedish-speaking area of Finland – for three hundred and fifty years) was published in 2015. Since 1990, she has participated in the projects of Nordisk forening for folkedansforskning (Nordic association for folk dance research) and served on its board. Together with Egil Bakka et al (eds), she co-edited Norden i Dans. Folk ‒ Fag ‒ Forskning (Oslo, Novus 2007).