Eeva KILPI

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Eeva Kilpi (1928) comes from eastern Karelia, east of Finland's present-day border with Russia, studied English philology at the University of Helsinki, and worked as a teacher before she began to earn a living from her writing. From 1970 to 1975, she chaired the PEN club in Finland.
Her experimental, erotic novel Tamara, which brought her international success, depicts the relationship between a sexually active woman and a handicapped man. In many of her works, the central character is a strong, independent woman. Besides fiction, she has also written autobiographical literature, in which she challenges the myth of the mother.
Eeva Kilpi is known as an ironic and humorous poet of the everyday. In her later poetry collections the writer questions man's right to dominate nature. Her last poetry collection (1996) was about sorrow and ageing, but also about love and passion.

 

 

  • Etxepare Euskal Institutua
  • Ville de Bruxelles
  • Ambassade du Luxembourg à Bruxelles
  • Embassy of the Republic of Estonia in Belgium
  • Polish Institute - Cultural Service of the Embassy of the Republic of Poland in Brussels
  • Embassy of Ireland
  • Austrian Cultural Forum
  • Lithuanian Culture Institute
  • Leeuwarden Europan Capital of Culture 2018
  • Yunus Emre Institute
  • LOFT 58
  • Embassy of Andorra
  • Network to Promote Linguistic Diversity
  • Romanian Cultural Institute in Brussels
  • MuntPunt
  • Commission européenne
  • Greenland Representation to the European Union
  • Camões Instituto de Cooperação e Língua Portugal
  • Permanent Representation of the Republic of Slovenia to the European Union
  • Czech Centre Brussels
  • Embassy of Sweden
  • Scottish Government EU Office
  • Spain Arts and Culture - Cultural and Scientific Service of the Embassy of Spain in Belgium
  • It Skriuwersboun
  • Greenlandic Writers Association
  • LUCA School of Arts
  • Danish Cultural Institute
  • Orfeu - Livraria Portuguesa
  • Istituto Italiano di Cultura
  • Instituto Cervantes Brussels
  • Austrian Presidency of the Council of the European Union
  • Vlaams-Nederlands Huis deBuren
  • Embassy of the Republic of Latvia to the Kingdom of Belgium
  • Permanent Representation of the Republic of Estonia to the European Union
  • Hungarian Cultural Institute Brussels
  • Mission of the Faroes to the EU
  • Swedish Institute
  • Permanent Representation of Lithuania to the EU