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Asian American Religion

Why Chinese and Korean Americans adopt Christianity

  1. Min, P. (2002). Introduction. In P. Min & J. Kim (Eds.), Religions in Asian American: Building Faith Communities (pp. 1-14). Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira.
  2. Alumkal, A. (2000). Ethnicity, Assimilation, and Racial Formation in Asian American Evangelical Churches: A Case Study of a Chinese American and a Korean American Congregation. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Sociology, Princeton University, Princeton, NJ.
  3. Hall, B. (2006). Social and Cultural Contexts in Conversion to Christianity Among Chinese American College Students. Sociology of Religion, 67, 131-147.
  4. Yang, F. (1997). Religious Conversion and Identity Construction: A study of a Chinese Church in the United States. Ph.D. dissertation, Department of Sociology, Catholic University of America, Washington, DC.
  5. Palinkas, L. (1989). Rhetoric and Religious Experience: The Discourse of Immigrant Chinese Churches. Fairfax, VA: George Mason UP.
  6. Ecklund, E., & Park, J. (2005). Asian American Community Participation and Religion: Civic “Model Minorities?”. Journal of Asian American Studies, 8, 1-21.
  7. Chong, K. (1998). What it Means to be Christian: The Role of Religion in the Construction of Ethnic Identity and Boundary among Second Generation Korean-Americans. Sociology of Religion, 59, 259-286.
  8. Jeung, R. (2002). Asian American Pan-Ethnic Formation and Congregational Culture. In P. Min & J. Kim (Eds.), Religions in Asian American: Building Faith Communities (pp. 215-243). Walnut Creek, CA: Altamira.