Finnish-American Immigrants in Transition 2009

International Seminar on Migration History in Turku, June 1-2, 2009

The Dept. of General History, University of Turku, the FIDIPRO programme Multiculturalism as a new pathway to incorporation, and the Institute of Migration will organize in Turku an international seminar on the Finnish-American Immigrants in Transition 2009, on June 1st and 2nd, 2009.

The tradition of studying Finns in America as an academic skill dates to the 1920’s. Thereafter, a large number of studies on Finns in America has been carried on in Finland, United States and Canada. The actual flourishing of the studies and writing migrant histories began in the 1960’s and 1970’s. At the same time even the founding of a number special archives and research institutions took place, such as the Institute of Migration in Turku and the Immigration History Research Center in Minneapolis (University of Minnesota). Consequently, migration studies and migration history stabilized their place in the field of teaching and studying.

The seminar invites together the active scholars of the topic in various countries. Also, the aim is to get involved researchers from related fields of study who are interested in migration history, as well as other interested parties. The preliminary list of presenters includes specialists from Finland, United States, Canada and Denmark. The seminar offers a good possibility to strengthen the researcher networks and contacts.

Many of the topics discussed are of great relevance today, since we face quite similar problems in various societies and even in international relations. The seminar focuses on the history of the Finns in North America as well as its interpretation, and discusses the changing Finnish-American immigrant communities and their members.

The expression of change refers primarily to the problem of generations, acculturation and assimilation, as well as the changing immigrant cultures. The focal point is on the preservation of ethnic specifications, how these specific features have been preserved, lost or transformed, while at the same time the immigrant community always has functioned in the context of the host society. The aim is also to present possibilities of multidisciplinary approaches in the study of the history of the Finns in North America and in more general terms, in the history of the migrant communities.

The language of the seminar will be primarily English.

Program in Turku, June 1.-2.2009

Place: Siirtolaisuusinstituutti – Institute of Migration, Eerikinkatu 34, 20100 Turku Finland

Organizers: Univ. of Turku, Dept. of General History and FIDIPRO programme Multiculturalism as a new pathway to incorporation; Institute of Migration.

chair: Auvo Kostiainen (aukosti@utu.fi); seminar secretary: Tuomas Räsänen (turasa@utu.fi)

June 1, 2009

12.00 Opening words: Rector Keijo Virtanen (Univ. of Turku); Director Olavi Koivukangas (Institute of Migration)

12.15 Prof. Andrés Reséndez (Univ. of California Davis; Univ. of Helsinki Bicentennial Chair), Forming Immigrant Identities

13.00 Ph.D. Sr. Lecturer Garbi Schmidt (Danish National Centre for Social Research, Copenhagen), Norms and Values in the Integration Process of the Immigrant

13.45 Prof. Auvo Kostiainen (Univ. of Turku), Writing of the Finnish-American History

14.30 Coffee Break

14.45 Prof. Arnold Alanen (Univ. of Wisconsin), Immigrant Landscapes

15.30 Prof. George Hummasti (Univ. of Missouri), Alcohol and the Immigrant Finns

16.15 Prof. Varpu Lindstöm and PhD cand. Samira Saramo (Univ. of North York, Toronto), The Finnish-Canadian Immigrant Experience

Commentator for day one: Prof. Jon Saari (Northern Mich. University)

19.00 Evening program

June 2, 2009

9.00 Prof. Peter Kivisto (Augustana College and FIDIPRO prof. Univ. of Turku), The Place of Race in American Immigration History

9.45 Coffee Break

10.00 Prof. Mika Roinila (Bethel College), Swedish-Finnish Experience in North America

10.45 Ph.D. cand. Johanna Leinonen (Univ. of Minnesota), Multicultural Family Histories

11.30 Lunch

12.30 Workshops

A: Images of the Finns in North America (chair Hannu Heinilä, HAMK)

Prof. Suzanne Matson (Boston College), The Liberty Committee: Finns, Sedition, and Montana Vigilantes during World War One

Prof. and Paloheimo Scholar Beth L. Virtanen (Finlandia University), Expressions of Immigrant Generations in Finnish American Literature

Researcher Tuomas Savonen (Institute of Migration), Gus Hall and Finnish-American Identity

Ph.D. Erik Hieta (University of California, Davis), Benefiting Finland: How Winter War Relief Efforts Impacted Finnish-American Identities

B: Finnish North-Americans Today (chairs Jouni Korkiasaari, Institute of Migration and Mika Roinila, Bethel College)

Ph.D. Raija Taramaa (University of Oulu), Finnish-American Literature – a Unique Literary Genre Depicting Drastic Evidence of Life in Marginality note: absent

Researcher Diane Dettmann (Literacy education, Univ. of Wisconsin, River Falls), Finnish Memoir, Miriam Daughter of Finnish Immigrants

Ph.D student Anu Karjalainen (University of Jyväskylä/ Applied Linguistics), Linguistic Resources in Change: Finnish Americans, Mobility and Finnish Language

Projet presentation: Doc.Soc.Sci. Anu-Hanna Anttila (Univ. of Turku), Ph.D. Ralf Kauranen (Åbo Akademi) & M.Soc.Sci. Pekka Rantanen (Univ. of Tampere): “Socialist political imagination circa 1905 – Finnish-American
routes and travel restrictions”
15.00 Workshop reporting

Commentator for day two: Prof. Jon Saari (Northern Mich. University)

16.00 Closing words

Hotel information:

There is a special price for Hotel Centro downtown Turku at 72 € per night http://www.centrohotel.com/en/index.html. Contact the hotel with code “Finnish-American Immigrants in Transition”, reservation no. 36093. For other Turku hotels, see

http://finland.hotels.com/hotellit-suomi/hotellit-turku/

This entry was posted in Conferences, News. Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *