Eeva Liisa Manner (born Dec. 5, 1921, Helsinki, Fin.—died July 7, 1995, Tampere) was a lyrical poet and dramatist, a central figure in the Finnish modernist movement of the 1950s.
Manner’s first publications as a lyrical poet appeared in the 1940s with Mustaa ja punaista (1944; “Black and Red”) and Kuin tuuli tai pilvi (1949; “As Wind or Clouds”), but her breakthrough came in 1956 with Tämä matka (“This Journey”), perhaps the most influential collection of modernist poems of the 1950s in Finland. Her poems are technically advanced and have great richness of association and powerful images. They are also characterized by a rare musicality and harmony. Manner was deeply critical of the intellectuality of modern civilization and looked to primitive innocence as a source of renewal.
In a collection of essays, Kävelymusiikkia pienille virahevoille (1957; “Promenade Music for Small Hippopotamuses”), she pointed to Chinese Taoism as an example of balance between rigid organization and chaos. Oriental philosophy also plays a part in Orfiset laulut (1960; “Orphic Hymns”), which is otherwise characterized by a feeling of doom. In her next collection, Niin vaihtuivat vuoden ajat (1964; “Thus Changed the Seasons”), she moved away from the general theme of Western civilization and depicted with grace and simplicity the minute phenomena of nature as proof of an underlying cosmic harmony. A later book of poetry, Kamala Kissa (1976; “That Horrible Cat”), revealed her humorous side. She wrote an autobiography of her childhood entitled Tyttö taivaan laiturilla (1951; “The Girl on the Bridge to Heaven”).
Manner was also known as a dramatist and wrote both verse dramas, such as Eros ja Psykhe (1959; “Eros and Psyche”), and traditional realistic plays, such as Poltettu oranssi (1968; “Burnt Orange”).