1st Edition

The Religion of Ethnicity Belief and Belonging in a Greek-American Community

By Gary A. Kunkelman Copyright 1990
    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    212 Pages
    by Routledge

    The integrative role of religion has been a recurrent theme of sociological and anthropological theory. This role is apparent in the Greek-American community; religion functions as a cement of the social fabric. Indeed, it would be hard to overestimate the role of Greek Orthodoxy in joining people of Greek ancestry into a community and reinforcing their sense of ethnic identity. The nature of ethnic identity and the church’s role in fostering and sustaining it are subjects of this study, first published in 1990. In ultimately focusing on the interplay between church, community and individual, the book suggests that understanding the relation of these people to their church is to understand them as a people.

    1. Background Considerations: Prior Research, Assumptions and Approach  2. The Community’s Early Years  3. Right and Wrong: Pride and Shame  4. Family: Marriage and Kin Relationships  5. Parent-Child Relationships  6. Education, Occupation and Success  7. The Ethnic Church  8. Contrasting Priestly Styles  9. Orthodoxy: Dogma and Cognitive Forms  10. The Concept of Ethnicity: Summary and Observations  11. The Religion of Ethnicity: Summary and Observations

    Biography

    Gary A. Kunkelman