Culture and Religion
Volume 15, Issue 1, 2014, Pages 118-146
He thinks Krishna is his friend: Domestic space and temple sociality in the socialisation beliefs of immigrant Indian Hindu parents (Article)
Ganapathy-Coleman H.*
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a
Department of Communication Disorders and Counseling, School and Educational Psychology, Indiana State University, Terre Haute, IN 47809, United States
Abstract
This paper reports results from a study of the cultural belief systems, or ethnotheories, of Asian Indian Hindu parents in the city of Baltimore, Maryland, in the USA. I adopted a cultural, developmental psychological approach and, over a one-year period, used caregiver diaries, ecological inventories, repeated in-depth interviews and participant observations to gain access to the ethnotheories of the parents. These immigrant parents emphasised family ties, unprompted adherence to the daily routine, knowledge of cultural origins and religiously inflected moral values. Exploring the nuances of their emphasis on cultural origins and moral and religious values, particularly as those relate to Hinduism and its transnational rearticulation, I show how the parents utilised domestic spaces and the temple as dual venues to systematically socialise their children into a new form of Hindu religious and Indian ethnic identity in the USA. © 2014 Taylor and Francis.
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Link
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84897029206&doi=10.1080%2f14755610.2014.884010&partnerID=40&md5=7d0655855c0c2cb4679fff21df69750a
DOI: 10.1080/14755610.2014.884010
ISSN: 14755610
Original Language: English