Emotions, trading practices and communication in transnational itinerant trade: encounters between ‘Rucksack Russians’ and their customers in the late nineteenth- and early twentieth century Finland

This article examinesthe relations between so-called ‘Rucksack Russians’, itinerant traders fromRussian Karelia, and their local customers in late 19th and early 20th ruralFinland. Finland was a part of the Russian Empire, but, according to Finnish law,itinerant trade was illegal for people without...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Scandinavian Economic History Review
Main Authors: Wassholm, Johanna, Sundelin, Anna
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:unknown
Published: 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://research.abo.fi/en/publications/9db78074-3d93-4d9a-b133-3625dfa0363f
https://doi.org/10.1080/03585522.2018.1466725
https://research.abo.fi/ws/files/25507499/Emotions,%20trading%20practices%20and%20communication.pdf
http://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi-fe2020100883535
Description
Summary:This article examinesthe relations between so-called ‘Rucksack Russians’, itinerant traders fromRussian Karelia, and their local customers in late 19th and early 20th ruralFinland. Finland was a part of the Russian Empire, but, according to Finnish law,itinerant trade was illegal for people without citizenship rights in the GrandDuchy. The trade was, thus, illicit, although often seen through the fingers byboth customers and authorities. We study trader–customer relations throughemotions, trading practices and communication, with special focus on the roleof itinerant trade for the consumption of women. We argue that analysing therelations from these perspectives deepens the understanding of the functions ofitinerant trade in society in general and of the shaping of a consumer societyin particular. For access to a consumer perspective, we use ethnographicquestionnaires, a source type that historians have acknowledged only in recentdecades. The questionnaires complement and nuance the predominantly negativeattitudes towards itinerant trade conveyed in the newspapers, which mainlyrepresent the viewpoints of the authorities and local merchants. Previousresearch has shown that itinerant trade played an important role for answeringto the growing demand for consumer goods in the 19th- and early 20th centuries.This article, which applies recent theoretical perspectives presented withinthe field of consumption history, and shifts focus from the consumption of theelite to that of that of the lower strata of society, offers a fresh take onsuch aspects of trader–consumer relations that previous historical research onitinerant trade has overlooked.