Asian Americans and the Spirit of Racial Capitalism: AAR Reflection and Theory in the Study of Religion
Autor Jonathan Tranen Limba Engleză Paperback – 5 ian 2022
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780197617915
ISBN-10: 0197617913
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 6 b/w diagrams
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria AAR Reflection and Theory in the Study of Religion
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 0197617913
Pagini: 368
Ilustrații: 6 b/w diagrams
Dimensiuni: 236 x 157 x 21 mm
Greutate: 0.51 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Seria AAR Reflection and Theory in the Study of Religion
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
An engaging, interdisciplinary, and energetic reconsideration of Asian American identity, racial capitalism, and Christian theology, the book is highly recommended to readers interested in broader questions of race, religion, and political economy.
This is an excellent read for all whose research intersects between Christian theology, sociology of religion, qualitative research, and Asian American studies.
This compelling book is a singular intervention in our current reckoning with racism and contemporary debates about antiracism. At once provocative and measured, Tran's book is a feat: a careful argument that is also a bombshell. He shows us the insidious way capitalism breeds competition amongst the exploited, but also how Christian theology, in conversation with Marxism, imagines a hope beyond racial capitalism. I am still reeling from reading this.
This well-researched book demonstrates that discourse on race and racism that fails to attend to class and political economy is only skin deep. Combining rich ethnographic data and vigorous theoretic discussion, Dr. Tran advances a theory of racial capitalist economy to interpret Asian American experience and their Christian practices that is innovative and compelling. It deserves to be widely read and debated!
Jonathan Tran's remarkable book breaks new conceptual ground in the analysis of 'race', racism and religion in the United States by providing a fearless critique of how standard scripts about racial 'identity', even when enunciated by those who claim to be fighting injustice most emphatically, simply reinstantiate what they are claiming to overcome. The problem is that these well-meaning discourses obscure what most needs exposure: the economic substructure which keeps the problematic core racial binary in place, and at the same time relegates those who do not conform to that binary (specifically, 'Asian Americans') into a strange place of collusion or further marginalization. But Tran is no standard neo-Marxist, either: through a rich use of comparative ethnographic studies he is able to show how Christianity's core meanings, when truly activated politically, can still change these narratives and also their outcomes.
Tran's theoretical analysis of Asian American life through the lens of racial capitalism gains real empirical density by foregrounding the oral histories of the Delta Chinese of Mississippi and of Asian American coalitions working in black communities of San Francisco. An essential read for Asian American studies in religion and theology, and for race theory approaches open to reflections on 'racial capitalism.'
Asian Americans and the Spirit of Racial Capitalism is a gift we didn't know we needed until we received it.
Scholars interested in religion and politics will have much to gain from this important text.
I must say that the book was an incredibly stimulating read. Methodologically, it does a wonderful job of using oral history and ethnography to engage deeply theological and ethical questions.
The text is an important read for those who are engaged in theology in the public sphere. I also encourage academics teaching courses on justice and practical theology to consider this as a resource.
This is an excellent read for all whose research intersects between Christian theology, sociology of religion, qualitative research, and Asian American studies.
This compelling book is a singular intervention in our current reckoning with racism and contemporary debates about antiracism. At once provocative and measured, Tran's book is a feat: a careful argument that is also a bombshell. He shows us the insidious way capitalism breeds competition amongst the exploited, but also how Christian theology, in conversation with Marxism, imagines a hope beyond racial capitalism. I am still reeling from reading this.
This well-researched book demonstrates that discourse on race and racism that fails to attend to class and political economy is only skin deep. Combining rich ethnographic data and vigorous theoretic discussion, Dr. Tran advances a theory of racial capitalist economy to interpret Asian American experience and their Christian practices that is innovative and compelling. It deserves to be widely read and debated!
Jonathan Tran's remarkable book breaks new conceptual ground in the analysis of 'race', racism and religion in the United States by providing a fearless critique of how standard scripts about racial 'identity', even when enunciated by those who claim to be fighting injustice most emphatically, simply reinstantiate what they are claiming to overcome. The problem is that these well-meaning discourses obscure what most needs exposure: the economic substructure which keeps the problematic core racial binary in place, and at the same time relegates those who do not conform to that binary (specifically, 'Asian Americans') into a strange place of collusion or further marginalization. But Tran is no standard neo-Marxist, either: through a rich use of comparative ethnographic studies he is able to show how Christianity's core meanings, when truly activated politically, can still change these narratives and also their outcomes.
Tran's theoretical analysis of Asian American life through the lens of racial capitalism gains real empirical density by foregrounding the oral histories of the Delta Chinese of Mississippi and of Asian American coalitions working in black communities of San Francisco. An essential read for Asian American studies in religion and theology, and for race theory approaches open to reflections on 'racial capitalism.'
Asian Americans and the Spirit of Racial Capitalism is a gift we didn't know we needed until we received it.
Scholars interested in religion and politics will have much to gain from this important text.
I must say that the book was an incredibly stimulating read. Methodologically, it does a wonderful job of using oral history and ethnography to engage deeply theological and ethical questions.
The text is an important read for those who are engaged in theology in the public sphere. I also encourage academics teaching courses on justice and practical theology to consider this as a resource.
Notă biografică
Jonathan Tran is Professor of Theology and Ethics at Baylor University where he holds the George W. Baines Chair of Religion.