Gatherings In Diaspora: Religious Communities and the New Immigration

Gatherings In Diaspora: Religious Communities and the New Immigration

by Stephen Warner
Gatherings In Diaspora: Religious Communities and the New Immigration

Gatherings In Diaspora: Religious Communities and the New Immigration

by Stephen Warner

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Overview

Gatherings in Diaspora brings together the latest chapters in the long-running chronicle of religion and  immigration in the American experience. Today, as in the past, people migrating to the United States bring their religions with them, and their religious identities often mean more to them away from home, in their diaspora, than they did before.

This book explores and analyzes the diverse religious communities of post-1965 diasporas: Christians, Hews, Muslims, Hindus, Rastafarians, and practitioners of Vodou, from countries such as China, Guatemala, Haiti, India, Iran, Jamaica, Korea, and Mexico. The contributors explore how, to a greater or lesser extent, immigrants and their offspring adapt their religious institutions to American conditions, often interacting with religious communities already established. The religious institutions they build, adapt, remodel, and adopt become worlds unto themselves, congregations, where new relations are forged within the community -- between men and women, parents and children, recent arrival and those longer settled.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781439901526
Publisher: Temple University Press
Publication date: 03/16/2009
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 416
Lexile: 1410L (what's this?)
File size: 1 MB

About the Author

R. Stephan Warner, Professor of Sociology at the University of Illinois at Chicago, is the author of New Wine in Old Wineskins: Evangelicals and Liberals in a Small-Town Church.

Judith G. Wittner is Associate Professor of Sociology and former Director of Women's Studies at Loyola University of Chicago.

Table of Contents

CONTENTS

Introduction
Immigration and Religious Communities in the United States
R. Stephan Warner

I   Religion and the Negotiation of Identities
1   Becoming American by Becoming Hindu: Indian Americans Take Their Place and the Multicultural Table
     Prema Kurien
2   From the Rivers of Babylon to the Valleys of Los Angeles: The Exodus and Adaptation of Iranian Jews
     Shoshanah Feher

II   Transnational Migrants and Religious Hosts
3   Santa Eulalia's People in Exile: Maya Religion, Culture, and Identity in Los Angeles
     Nancy J. Wellmeier
4   The Madonna of 115th Street Revisited:L Vodou and Haitian Catholicism in the Age of Transnationalism
     Elizabeth McAlister

III   Institutional Adaptations
5   Born Again in East LA: The Congregation as Border Space
     Luis Leon
6   The  House That Rasta Built: Church-Building and Fundamentalism Among New York Rastafarians
     Randal L. Hepner
7   Structural Adaptations in an Immigrant Muslim Congregation in New York
     Rogaia Mustafa Abusharaf

IV   Internal Differentiation
8   Caroling with the Keralites: The Negotiation of Gendered Space in an Indian Immigrant Church
     Sheba George
9   Competing for the Second Generation: English-Language Ministry at a Korean Protestant Church
     Karen J. Chai
10 Tenacious Unity in a  Contentious Community: Cultural and Religious Dynamics in a Chinese Christian    
     Church
     Fenggang Yang

Conclusion
     A Reader Among Fieldworkers
     Judith G. Wittner

Project Director's Acknowledgments
About the Contributors and Editors
Index
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