Site mapAbout usConsultative CommitteeAsk LibrarianContributionCopyrightCitation GuidelineDonationHome        

CatalogAuthor AuthorityGoogle
Search engineFulltextScripturesLanguage LessonsLinks
 


Extra service
Tools
Export
A Self of One's Own: Taiwanese Immigrant Women and Religious Conversion
Author Chen, Carolyn (著)
Source Gender and Society
Volumev.19 n.3
Date2005.06
Pages336 - 357
PublisherSage Publications, Inc.
Publisher Url http://www.sagepub.com/
LocationLondon, England, UK [倫敦, 英格蘭, 英國]
Content type期刊論文=Journal Article
Language英文=English
NoteCarolyn Chen is an assistant professor in the Department of Sociology and the Asian American Studies Program at Northwestern University. Her areas of research are religion, migration, and race and ethnicity. Her book Getting Saved in America: Taiwanese Immigrants Converting to Evangelical Christianity and Buddhism is forthcoming from Princeton University Press.
Keywordreligion; immigration; gender; conversion; personhood
AbstractAlthough recent scholarship focuses on the importance of religion to immigrants in the United States, relatively little attention has been given to how religion shapes the everyday lives of immigrant women. This article examines how Taiwanese immigrant women as religious converts use Buddhism and Christianity to construct a distinct sense of self from the family. Buddhism and Christianity challenge traditional gender roles by offering alternative conceptions of a genderless self. Women's new religious commitments may compete with their traditional commitments to their families. Through religious conversion, women carve out spaces of independence and authority for themselves, albeit never at the cost of threatening the nuclear family.
Table of contentsMethod and Setting 337
Religion, Immigration, and Gender 338
Women and Individual Interpretations of Religion 340
Religion and the Rejection of the Family 341
Religion and Women's Rejection of the Kin-Defined Self 342
Becoming New Selves: Working Out Taiwanese Traditions and American Contradictions 342
A Separate Self from the Family 345
"Becoming Her Own Person": A Christian Experience 345
"Letting Her True Nature Come Out": A Buddhist Experience 347
Religion and Family: Competing Commitments 350
Women Prioritizing Religion 350
Religion within the Constraints of the Family 352
Conclusion 353
References 354
ISSN08912432 (P); 15523977 (E)
DOI10.1177/0891243204273125
Hits134
Created date2023.11.16
Modified date2023.11.16



Best viewed with Chrome, Firefox, Safari(Mac) but not supported IE

Notice

You are leaving our website for The full text resources provided by the above database or electronic journals may not be displayed due to the domain restrictions or fee-charging download problems.

Record correction

Please delete and correct directly in the form below, and click "Apply" at the bottom.
(When receiving your information, we will check and correct the mistake as soon as possible.)

Serial No.
687026

Search History (Only show 10 bibliography limited)
Search Criteria Field Codes
Search CriteriaBrowse