The Nobel Festival is a series of litterary evenings inpired by female Nobel writers
May 6th at 6 pm
at G18, Yrjönkatu 18, Helsinki
An introduction to Toni Morrison: Minna Salami
Our Own Best Thing
Text: Pamela Cohn
The Haunting Dance
Text: Isha Lucas
Discussion moderated by Mirva Helenius
The evening will be in English and Swedish;
The readings in Swedish and the discussions in English.
The theater will provide English versions of the texts.
Director: Carl Alm
The room: Ksenia Peretrukhina, Ida Rosenblad
Communication: Ida Rosenblad, Kristina Gröqvist von Bonsdorff, Ella Slunga
Head of production: Irina Duskova
Artistic director, Klockriketeatern: Dan Henriksson
GET YOUR TICKET Pay what you can and want!
Minna Salami, a Finnish-Nigerian author and social critic is one of the leading voices of contemporary afrofeminism. In her works Salami challenges the dominance of Western, Europatriarchal knowledge, and proposes other, African and black feminist ways to perceive the world. Her internationally acclaimed book Sensuous Knowledge: A Black Feminist Approach for Everyone was published in 2020 and has been translated into several languages including Swedish and Finnish. Her new book Can Feminism be African: A Most Paradoxical Question came out in 2025.
– TONI MORRISON
May 6th at 6 pm
GET YOUR TICKET
Venue: The SFV-house G18 in Helsinki, Yrjönkatu18, 2nd floor
Together with Svenska folkskolans vänner, Klockriketeatern is introducing a completely new concept: a series of new texts written for the stage. During the season 2024-25 we present ten new short works inspired by female Nobel writers.
For the forst season of Nobelfestivalen we have commisioned works from female and non-binary writers, chosen by a jury through an open call.
This season we arrange five different events, each one focusing on one nobel writer and two new texts inspired by her. The program each evening consists of an introduction, stage readings of the new texts and discussion and analysis.
The five first Nobel writers are Svetlana Aleksijevitj, Annie Ernaux, Herta Müller, Toni Morrison and Selma Lagerlöf.