A Place at the Multicultural Table
The Development of an American Hinduism
In A Place at the Multicultural Table, Prema A. Kurien shows how various Hindu American organizations--religious, cultural, and political--are attempting to answer the puzzling questions of identity outside their homeland. Drawing on the experiences of both immigrant and American-born Hindu Americans, Kurien demonstrates how religious ideas and practices are being imported, exported, and reshaped in the process. The result of this transnational movement is an American Hinduism--an organized, politicized, and standardized version of that which is found in India.
This first in-depth look at Hinduism in the United States and the Hindu Indian American community helps readers to understand the private devotions, practices, and beliefs of Hindu Indian Americans as well as their political mobilization and activism. It explains the differences between immigrant and American-born Hindu Americans, how both understand their religion and their identity, and it emphasizes the importance of the social and cultural context of the United States in influencing the development of an American Hinduism.
This book is an impressive work of scholarship in its breadth and depth of information on the Hindu American experience.
Hinduism in India
Transplanting Hinduism in the United States
We are better Hindus here : Local associations
The abode of God: temples
Forging an official Hinduism in India: Hindu umbrella organizations
Forging an official Hinduism in the United States: Hindu American umbrella organizations
Re-visioning Indian history: Internet Hinduism
Challenging American pluralism: Hindu Americans in the public sphere
Being young, brown, and Hindu: student organizations
The development of an American Hinduism