Asian American Religions: The Making and Remaking of Borders and Boundaries

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Tony Carnes, Fenggang Yang
NYU Press, 2004 - 399 ˹éÒ

Asian American Religions brings together some of the most current research on Asian American religions from a social science perspective. The volume focuses on religion in Asian American communities in New York, Houston, Los Angeles, and the Silicon Valley/Bay Area, and it includes a current demographic overview of the various Asian populations across the United States. It also provides information on current trends, such as that Filipino and Korean Americans are the most religiously observant people in America, that over 60 percent of Asian Americans who have a religious identification are Christian, and that one-third of Muslims in the United States are Asian Americans.
Rather than organizing the book around particular ethnic groups or religions, Asian American Religions centers on thematic issues, like symbols and rituals, political boundaries, and generation gaps, in order to highlight the role of Asian American religions in negotiating, accepting, redefining, changing, and creating boundaries in the communities' social life.

 

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Introduction
1
The Religious Demography of Asian American Boundary Crossing
38
Part I Symbols and Rituals
53
1 Liminal Youth among Fuzhou Chinese Undocumented Workers
55
South Asian Taxi Drivers in New York City
76
3 Paradoxes of MediaReflected Religiosity among Hindu Indians
98
4 Global Hinduism in Gotham
112
Events Generation and Age
139
9 Faith Values and Fears of New York City Chinatown Seniors
223
Part III Political Boundaries
245
10 Religious Diversity and Social Integration among Asian Americans in Houston
247
An Empirical Assessment from the Pilot National Asian American Political Survey
263
Part IV Transcending Borders and Boundaries
285
Grace Community Covenant Church
287
Intermarriage and Identity at a Thai Buddhist Temple in Silicon Valley
313
Social and Cultural Capital from Filipinos and Their Churches
338

5 Negotiation of Ethnic and Religious Boundaries by Asian American Campus Evangelicals
141
6 Christian by Birth or Rebirth? Generation and Difference in an Indian American Christian Church
160
A Resolution of Sociological Ambivalence among Korean American College Students
182
8 Gender and Generation in a Chinese Christian Church
205
Bibliography
361
About the Contributors
395
Index
397
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Tony Carnes directs the Seminar on Contents and Methods in the Social Sciences at Columbia University, the International Research Institute on Values Changes, and the Research Institute for New Americans. He is the coeditor of New York Glory: Religions in the City (NYU Press, 2001). Fenggang Yang is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Purdue University. He is the author of Chinese Christians in America.

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