Finland’s first-ever Book Club creates much needed space for vulnerability among men

nov 17, 2022 | Blog, Masculinities

Kriticos Mwansa, known for The Book Club concept in the Benelux area, held his first Book Club in Helsinki on the 9th of November. Focusing on masculinity, the Book Club took place in collaboration with the Jäbät ja Tunteet community and the Finnish Cultural Institute for the Benelux. 

The session was based on the book The Will to Change: Masculinity, Men & Love by writer and activist bell hooks.   

We asked Yohannes Henriksson, Project Assistant at the Finnish Cultural Institute for the Benelux and participant at the event to share his experience of his first-ever Book Club.

A group of men sit round a table in an ambiently lit room.

The Book Club with Kriticos Mwansa in Helsinki 09.11.2022. Photo by Yohannes Henriksson / The Finnish Cultural Institute for the Benelux

A Deeper Need to Be Heard

By Yohannes Henriksson

When I first heard that Kriticos’ Book Club on masculinity would take place in Finland, I immediately saw two vivid mental images; one where a group of men were sitting quietly in a room staring at the floor, counting the minutes, and an alternative version, where we ran out of wine before The Book Club had even started.

However, to my own surprise, I couldn’t have been more wrong!

After the first question “What ways are the best to channel your pent-up emotions?” all the men participating started to discuss. Different perspectives and personal experiences were shared and listened to resulting in all the unknown men sitting beside me starting to feel less foreign. The pre-picked quotes then naturally confluence with other topics and questions leading to a flowing conversation highlighting the participants longing to open-up and talk.

After the first hour of the men-only discussion, everyone else was allowed to join in. At this point, I could feel a change in energy, as I felt that the safe space was disrupted. Nevertheless, by the end of the “open for all” discussion it started to feel more of a safe space again; a feeling that then lingered throughout the rest of the evening. 

Personally, I feel like Kriticos and Jäbät ja Tunteet succeeded in creating an environment free of judgement and assumptions. To be among 11 (mostly) unknown men and to be able to speak and listen to each other about themes like love, emotions and how we view our male models and ourselves in life, was not only refreshing, it fed a deeper need to be heard and to open-up to other male-defining individuals. The Book Club ultimately succeeded in something greater than just an interesting discussion. The Book Club gave its participants a direction to follow on how to open their mental and emotional locks by simply discussing and sharing thoughts about masculinity among other men; a concept that is still foreign to most men in my own social circle.

 

Read more about the collaboration. 

 

Oulu unveils its 2026 programme as the European Capital of Culture in Brussels

The European Capitals of Culture 2026, Oulu and Trenčín, unveiled their programmes to audiences in Brussels on the 4th of November.

blood and thunder: A conversation with Kevin Fay

An in-depth interview with Kevin Fay about his artistic process, balancing the personal and the political, and his use of tender improvisation.

Explore gender identity through movement and sound with Kevin Fay at TOIVOLA festival

Join Kevin Fay and Guillaume Soula on 14 November at TOIVOLA Festival for a performance and workshop exploring gender identity.

Tiina Pyykkinen

Tiina Pyykkinen is a Helsinki-based visual artist who works primarily with paintings and installations, focusing on the themes of communication, individual and collective memory, and time and its disorder as a bodily experience.

Sara Bjarland

Sara Bjarland is a Finnish artist based in Amsterdam. She investigates how worthless materials can serve as meaning carriers for a new life as a work of art.