The saints of Santa Ana: faith and ethnicity in a Mexican majority city

"To examine the intersection of religion and ethnicity among Mexican immigrants, this volume takes readers into the vibrant neighborhoods of central Santa Ana, California, a Mexican majority metropolis with high rates of religious participation. Ethnic Mexicans have traditionally been character...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Calvillo, Jonathan (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: New York Oxford University Press [2020]
In:Year: 2020
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B California / Migrant / Mexico / Faith / Ethnic identity / Religious sociology
Further subjects:B Ethnicity Religious aspects Catholic Church
B Ethnicity Religious aspects Protestant churches
B Mexican American Protestants (California) (Santa Ana) Ethnic identity
B Santa Ana (Calif.) Religious life and customs
B Communities Religious aspects Protestant churches
B Mexican American Catholics (California) (Santa Ana) Ethnic identity
B Communities Religious aspects Catholic Church
Description
Summary:"To examine the intersection of religion and ethnicity among Mexican immigrants, this volume takes readers into the vibrant neighborhoods of central Santa Ana, California, a Mexican majority metropolis with high rates of religious participation. Ethnic Mexicans have traditionally been characterized by high rates of religious participation, and have historically been marked as ethnoracially distinct from the white majority. On the one hand, this volume investigates whether Mexican ethnicity is indeed a cohesive organizing principle that continues to mark Mexicans as distinct. On the other hand, the volume examines the mechanisms of religion that sustain or alter in-group understandings of ethnicity. To highlight the mechanisms that shape ethnic identity, the volume takes a comparative approach, juxtaposing the experiences of Catholic and Evangelical Mexican immigrants, the two largest religious groupings in the city. Through five years of participant observation within formal and informal Catholic and Evangelical spaces in Santa Ana, and based on in-depth interviews of fifty parishioners, this book argues that religious affiliations set Catholics and Evangelicals along diverging trajectories of ethnic identity construction. In particular, I argue that while Mexican Catholics ritualize a sense of their ethnic past, Mexican evangelicals posit a rupture with the past rooted in conversion. Catholics and Evangelicals' diverging understandings of ethnic community and of ethnic identity manifest as distinct practices of ethnic space"--
Item Description:Revision of the author's thesis (Ph.D.)--University of California, Irvine, 2016
Includes bibliographical references and index
ISBN:0190097795