Korean Americans and their religions : pilgrims and missionaries from a different shore / edited by Ho-Youn Kwon, Kwang Chung Kim, and R. Stephen Warner.
Intra-ethnic religious diversity: Korean Buddhists and Protestants in greater Boston / Karen J. Chai. R. Stephen Warner, The Ho-Youn Kwon -- The Korean immigrant church as case and model / R. Stephen Warner -- Pilgrimage and home in the wilderness of marginality: symbols and context in Asian American theology / Sang Hyun Lee -- Ethnic roles of Korean immigrant churches in the United States / Kwang Chung Kim and Shin Kim -- Religion as a variable in mental health: a case for Korean Americans / Tong-He Koh -- A theological reflection on the cultural tensions between first-century Hebraic and Hellenistic Jewish Christians and between twentieth-century first- and second-generation Korean Americans / Robert D. Goette and Mae Pyen Hong -- The transformation of a first-generation church into a bilingual second-generation church / Robert D. Goette -- Ethnic identity formation and participation in immigrant churches: second-generation Korean American experiences / Peter T. Cha -- Beyond "strictness" to distinctiveness: generational transition in Korean Protestant churches / Karen J. Chai -- Being Korean, being Christian: particularism and universalism in a second-generation congregation / Antony W. Alumkal -- The intersection of religion, race, gender and ethnicity in the identity formation of Korean American Evangelical women / Soyoung Park -- The growth of Korean Buddhism in the United States with special reference to Southern California / Eui-Young Yu -- Turning the wheel of Dharma in the West: Korean Sŏn Buddhism in North America / Samu Sunim (Kim, Sam-Woo) -- Won Buddhism in the United States / Bok In Kim -- Intra-ethnic religious diversity: Korean Buddhists and Protestants in greater Boston / Karen J. Chai.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.