The West has always been a resource for the Finns. Scholars, artists and
other professionals have sought contacts from Europe throughout the
centuries. The Finnish experience in Western Europe and the New World is
a story of migrant laborers, expatriates and specialists working abroad.
But you don't have to be born in Finland to be a Finn. The experiences
of second-generation Finnish immigrants and their descendants open up
new possibilities for understanding the relationship between Finland and
the West. The Finnish passage westward has not always crossed national
borders. Karelian evacuees headed west, as did young people from the
Finnish countryside when opportunities to make a living in agriculture
and forestry diminished in the post-war era. The legacy of these
migrants is still visible in the suburbs of Finnish cities today. This
book is a joint effort of the Department of Ethnology and the Department
of History at the University of Helsinki. It was written by Ph. D.
students supervised by Academy Research Fellows Maria Lähteenmäki and
Hanna Snellman, in collaboration with colleagues abroad interested in
current research in ethnology and history.