Samira Saramo, PhD, is a Finnish Canadian transdisciplinary historian whose research focuses on migration, ethnicity, place-making, emotions, and the everyday in both historical and current contexts. Most often, Samira’s work centers on histories of Finnish migrants in Canada and the United States, as well as in Soviet Karelia. Currently, Samira is a Kone Foundation Senior Researcher at the Migration Institute of Finland.
Projects
Deep Mapping the “Uncharted Territories” of Finnish Immigrant History (Kone Foundation, 2020–2024)
Death and Mourning in “Finnish North America” (Academy of Finland, 2017–2020)
Select publications
Saramo, Samira. “Terveisiä: A Century of Finnish Immigrant Letters.” Michel Beaulieu, Ronald Harpelle, and David Ratz (eds.), Hard Work Conquers All: Finnish Canadian Experiences. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2018, 165–184.
Saramo, Samira. “Unsettling Spaces: Grassroots Responses to Canada’s Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women during the Harper Government Years.” Benita Heiskanen and Samira Saramo (eds.), Disrupting Insecurity: Grassroots Interventions, Special Issue of Comparative American Studies 14, 3/4 (December 2016), 204–220.
Saramo, Samira. “Life Moving Forward: Soviet Karelia in the Letters and Memoirs of Finnish North Americans.” Doctoral Dissertation, Graduate Program in History. York University. 2014.