Sanna Karlström:
Where we are now

Sanna Karlström
Photo
Irmeli Jung |
The calm, precisely defined atmosphere of Sanna
Karlström's poems is interlined by the fragility and seriousness
of the 'I', suggesting a certain sorrow. The clarity and purity of
Finnish modernism's tradition shows up in her controlled style; one
may detect glimpses of the classically modernist images of Paavo Haavikko
(born 1931) in her poems. Karlström's collection, Taivaan
mitta-kaava ('The scale of the sky', Otava, 2004; see page 251)
does consider 'the scale of the sky', but her gaze is more centred
on what is close at hand, the small. The 'scale' she works on is that
of windows and rooms, which reflect both the self and 'the other'.
Sanna Karlström (born 1975) published
her first volume Taivaan mitta-kaava last spring. In November
she was awarded the Helsingin Sanomat Literary Prize for the
best first work of 2004.
The relation of the 'I' of the poems
to another person is often questioned - and often considered post-obit,
through separation and absence. The persona is carrying on a one-sided
dialogue with a chess master, an architect, or her mother, who don't
seem to reply. Her closest people are only present as phantoms of
a sort, disturbances, vibrations. The writing signals an absence,
the -afterimage of someone's presence. All these severances may well
be creating the vague sorrow that colours the poems, suggesting the
painful break-up of first human relationships and isolation. Maybe
that too is the source of the -persona's fragility and susceptibility;
she even feels she may not exist.
The title of the collection is a link
to another of the book's structural themes: the measuring of the measureless,
and mankind's aspiration to engineer and control his environment.
This emerges in the 'architect' sequence, for instance: 'today he's
been holding fields / between his thumb and forefinger / says they're
windy and misty places'. In controlling the world, the architect even
resembles God: his words and lines cause blocks of flats to rise,
and he 'seamlessly unites night and day'. Mankind's aspirations may
leave huge evidence of its existence on the world, but the last word
remains with man's insignificance - and his most important trace:
the one that can only be left on another human being. It's indicative
that when the persona hugs the architect, 'he leaves a trace on me
much smaller than himself'.
One may, in fact, read in Karlström's
poems a pursuit of completeness, and a critique of rectilinearity
and excessive planning. Organising the sky is impossible, and certainly
not desirable. Alongside the architect's great landmarks and pillars
Karlström erects man's insignificance and transience, 'a scarf
fluttering in the wind'. That may be the most important trace scribbled
on the mind of Karlström's reader: a fragile and piercing representation
of the transience of our presence - an important reason for the poetry's
value.
Miia Toivio
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