
Swedish singer Felicia Eriksson, aka Felicia and representing Sweden with the song 'My System', performs during the dress rehearsal for the grand final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2026.
Reuniting EuropeOn the other hand, since the contest expanded to the eastern part of the continent in the 2000s, Eurovision has served as a catalyst for European integration, said University of Glasgow expert Paul Jordan.
Participating in Eurovision has helped former Soviet republics such as Estonia and Ukraine cultivate their images as part of Europe, he added.
"Certainly for Ukraine, it was all about showing themselves as an independent Western, European country" while asserting opposition to Moscow, Jordan told AFP.
Galina Miazhevich from Cardiff University said that as much as countries have used "some ethnic elements and language elements to kind of declare: this is who we are", there has also been a melding of influences, with plenty of bilingual songs and homogenisation.
Social platformIn 1961, Jean‑Claude Pascal won with "Nous les amoureux" ("We the Lovers"), a song about a forbidden love that was later interpreted as an allusion to homosexuality.
The contest then became an ever more progressive stage, notably with the victory of transgender singer Dana International for Israel in 1998.
In 2015, Finland nominated Pertti Kurikan Nimipaivat, a punk band of musicians with disabilities.
In 2021, Suriname-born artist Jeangu Macrooy addressed slavery, racism, and the colonial legacy in his performance.
That same year, Russia's Manizha performed a song about the pressures faced by women and women's emancipation, which stirred controversy in her home country.

Finnish musicians Linda Lampenius and Pete Parkkonen, representing Finland with the song 'Liekinheitin', perform during the dress rehearsal for the grand final of the Eurovision Song Contest 2026.
Hit factory
Ever since the Swedish band ABBA rose to global fame after their victory in 1974, Eurovision has helped numerous stars, including Celine Dion and Italy's Maneskin, achieve stardom.
Following the rise of social media, singers and bands do not even have to win to make an international splash.
Armenia's Rosa Linn, who finished 20th in 2022, saw her song "Snap" go viral on Instagram and TikTok before scoring on international charts.
Cultural touchstoneEurovision's vast archives rack up millions of views on YouTube, with performances that have become entrenched in popular culture.
Its fame has also expanded well beyond the world of music -- even breaching the United States, with the Will Ferrell-led 2020 comedy "Eurovision Song Contest: The Story of Fire Saga".
It was not always so.
The show was "not cool" in the 1980s and 1990s and was dismissed as unappreciated kitsch in the West when eastern European countries joined, Jordan said.
The turn came in 2014, with the highly publicised victory of Austrian bearded drag queen Conchita Wurst, Jordan added.
Even though some performances still leave audiences baffled as too vulgar, or with humour that is too niche, the show caters to a wide variety of tastes -- from pop to opera, rock to rap, folk to chanson.
And even those who do not like Eurovision have an opinion on it, said Jordan.
"It's a kind of cultural reference point that everyone has," he said.
"We're growing up with this television show. And I think there's maybe this nostalgia in a way that there isn't for other things."