Cantitate/Preț
Produs

Joining the Choir: Religious Membership and Social Trust Among Transnational Ghanaians

Autor Nicolette D. Manglos-Weber
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 25 apr 2018
Immigration and race are contentious issues in North America. As a result, immigrants from Ghana and other countries of West Africa confront major challenges in the social context of the United States, even as their experiences and accomplishments confound stereotypes. Religious congregations have often helped immigrants navigate the tricky waters of integration in the past; yet how do these particular black immigrants approach organized religion in light of their identities and aspirations? What are they looking for in religious membership, and how do they find it?In Joining the Choir, Nicolette D. Manglos-Weber takes a deeply personal look at the lives of a few central characters in Accra, Ghana and Chicago, Illinois, examining what religious membership means for them as Christians, transnational Ghanaians, and aspirational migrants. She sheds light on their search for people they can trust and their desires to transcend divisions of race, ethnicity, and nationality in the context of Evangelical Christianity. Her characters are complex, motivated, and adaptable people for whom religious membership answers some questions of integration and raises others.The stories of these migrants show how racial divides are subtly perpetuated within congregations in spite of hopes for religious-based assimilation. Yet they also reveal the potential of religious-based personal trust to bridge those divides, as an imaginative and symbolic leap of faith with the unknown stranger. Finally, their stories highlight the continuing role of religion as a portable basis of trust in the modern world, where more and more people live between nations.
Citește tot Restrânge

Preț: 52486 lei

Preț vechi: 67900 lei
-23% Nou

Puncte Express: 787

Preț estimativ în valută:
10045 10566$ 8381£

Carte disponibilă

Livrare economică 09-14 decembrie

Preluare comenzi: 021 569.72.76

Specificații

ISBN-13: 9780190841041
ISBN-10: 0190841044
Pagini: 240
Dimensiuni: 236 x 160 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.5 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States

Recenzii

Joining the Choir is a well-written and well-structured book that greatly informs us about the role that religious memberships play in the lives of diverse African migrants in coping with the many challenges that they face in coming to the United States.Joining the Choir will naturally be of particular interest to scholars with an interest in the integration of African migrants in United States, but certainly also to scholars with a general interest in questions of immigration and integration.
Graduate students who regularly grapple with the challenges of cross-cultural and cross-racial research settings will appreciate and enjoy Joining the Choir. The author is explicit in self-identification as she studies a transnational group of mostly male Ghanaian migrants. Graduate students will like the volume also because of the use of first-person pronouns, "I".
...animating questions are raised as Manglos-Weber brings us into her exciting case study, gesturing toward possibilities in the sociology of religion that move such studies beyond inquiries into assimilation.
Weaving together a rich tapestry of individual life portraits, Manglos-Weber's sociological analysis of trust brings us on a delightful journey through the lives of several central characters, showing how they negotiate their faith in God with their immigrant realities.
This lucid, beautifully written study of a global Pentecostal church captures genuinely transnational experience. Based on rich fieldwork in Ghana and the U.S., Joining the Choir draws a compelling portrait of individual life trajectories as Ghanaians reimagine identities, aspirations and social connections in an unfamiliar place. A powerful sociological analysis of social trust in migrant communities, it shows how religious ritual, symbols, and sociability provide symbolic resources that create trust, both trust among congregants and trust in a future they are still trying to create.
The ethnographic immersion is the strength of this book, allowing Manglos-Weber to break the dualism between outsider and insider. Her voice and experiences are one of many illustrations of the broader social process she describes: how trust networks emerge among transnational Ghanaian Christians. This book will surely contribute to the sociology of migration as well as African studies. Moreover, Manglos-Weber makes a substantive contribution to understanding the imaginative and symbolic leaps of faith we all make when trusting others.
Nicolette Manglos-Weber gives us a sensitive and engaging transnational ethnography of 'aspirational migrants' -Ghanaians in the U.S. seeking opportunities for better lives while not jettisoning their home country. They face the 'problem of trust' that confronts many newcomers: how to decide which relationships to invest in and which people can truly be of help. She shows how religious choices are often grounded in concerns with social trust, and how trust networks can in turn transform churches as well as migrants's lives and aspirations. A welcome addition to the immigration and religion literature.

Notă biografică

Nicolette D. Manglos-Weber is Assistant Professor of Sociology at Kansas State University.