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E-grāmata: Nordic Whiteness and Migration to the USA: A Historical Exploration of Identity

Edited by (University of Oslo, Norway), Edited by (Colorado Mesa University, USA), Edited by (Augustana College, Rock Island, IL, USA), Edited by
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This volume explores the complex and contradictory ways in which the cultural, scientific and political myth of whiteness has influenced identities, self-perceptions and the process of integration of Nordic immigrants into multicultural and racially segregated American society in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. In deploying central insights from whiteness studies, postcolonial feminist and intersectionality theories, it shows that Nordic immigrants - Danes, Swedes, Finns, Norwegians and Sįmi - contributed to and challenged American racism and white identity. A diverse group of immigrants, they could proclaim themselves hyper-white and better citizens than anybody else, including Anglo-Saxons, thus taking for granted the racial bias of American citizenship and ownership rights, yet there were also various, unexpected intersections of whiteness with ethnicity, regional belonging, gender, sexuality, and political views. Nordic whiteness, then, was not a monolithic notion in the USA and could be challenged by other identities, which could even turn white Nordic immigrants into marginalised figures. A fascinating study of whiteness and identity among white migrants in the USA, Nordic Whiteness will appeal to scholars of sociology, history and anthropology with interests in Scandinavian studies, migration and diaspora studies and American studies.
Introduction: Whiteness in Nordic Immigrants Identity Formation Part 1:
Whiteness as Epistemological Ignorance
1. Norwegian Migration and Displaced
Indigenous Peoples: Toward an Understanding of Nordic Whiteness in the
Land-taking Part 2: Not Quite White: Painful Experiences of Sįmi Immigrants
2. Racialization of the Sįmi in Early Twentieth Century Migration Processes:
Trans-Atlantic Continuities and Divergences Part 3: White Immigrants and the
Failure of Class Solidarity
3. "On Liberty and Equality": Race and
Reconstruction among Scandinavian Immigrants, 1864-1868 Part 4: Nordic
Superiority and the Derogatory Representations of Others
4. Atop a Hierarchy
of Whiteness: Danish Americans as Portrayed by Danish Travel Writers in the
Second Half of the Nineteenth Century
5. Good Americans "Born of a Good
People": Race, Whiteness, and Nationalism Among Norwegian Americans in the
Pacific Northwest Part 5: Challenging Intersections of Whiteness and
Ethnicity
6. Ideal Immigrants? Ethnic Community Building among
Norwegian-Americans in the Nineteenth Century
7. In the American Matrix:
Norwegians in Chicago in the Nineteenth Century Part 6: Nonconformity and
Resistance to White Norms
8. Claiming Roots: Politics of Racial Ancestry in
the Finnish-American Press during the 1938 New Sweden Tercentenary
9. The
Nordic Mystique: Swedish Women as Sexualized "Other" in Postwar America
Conclusion: Nordic Slotting into the American Ethno-Racial Hierarchy
Jana Sverdljuk is Research Librarian and Curator of Migration Archives at the National Library of Norway. She has a PhD from the Centre for Gender Research at the Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU).

Terje Mikael Hasle Joranger is the Director of the Norwegian Emigrant Museum and has a Ph.D. in history from the Department of Archaeology, Conservation and History at the University of Oslo.

Erika K. Jackson is an Associate Professor of History at Colorado Mesa University, USA, and the author of Scandinavians in Chicago: The Origins of White Privilege in Modern America.

Peter Kivisto is the Richard A. Swanson Professor of Social Thought at Augustana College and Co-Director of the Laboratory on Transnationalism and Migration Processes at St. Petersburg State University, Russia. He has published 35 books, including works on radical Finnish immigrants in the United States, and more recent work focusing on theories of immigration, particularly transnationalism and multiculturalism. In 2013, he received an Honorary Doctorate from the University of Turku after spending four years there as a Finland Distinguished Professor.