Undocumented Migration as a Theologizing Experience: Religious Stories Korean American Dreamers Tell in the Face of Uncertainty: Theology in Practice, cartea 13
Autor Eunil David Choen Limba Engleză Paperback – 17 oct 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9789004704046
ISBN-10: 9004704043
Pagini: 244
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Theology in Practice
ISBN-10: 9004704043
Pagini: 244
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 x 15 mm
Greutate: 0.37 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill
Seria Theology in Practice
Notă biografică
Eunil David Cho, Ph.D., is Assistant Professor of Spiritual Care and Counseling and Co-director of the Center for Practical Theology at Boston University School of Theology.
Cuprins
Contents
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Undocumented Migration as a Theologizing Experience: How Korean American DACA Recipients Make Sense of Their Lives
2 What Is DACA and Why Does It Matter?
3 Why Do the Stories of DACA Recipients Matter? And Why Do They Matter Now?
4 Outline of Chapters
1 Documenting the Undocumented Stories: Pastoral Theology and Narrative Approaches to Qualitative Research
1 Seeking Care and Justice: The Communal-Contextual Turn in Pastoral Theology
2 Caring through Human Stories: Narrative Turn in Pastoral Theology and Care
3 Documenting the Undocumented Stories of Korean American DACA Recipients
4 Conclusion
2 We Are the Stories We Tell: Narrative Identity Formation and Development
1 The Ethical Narrative Identity Thesis
2 Psychological Perspectives on Narrative Identity
3 Reading Lives: Employing Narrative Identity in Pastoral Theology and Care
4 Religion as Personal Ideology in Self-Narratives
5 Conclusion: Why We Tell Religious Stories
3 Looking Back: Uplifting the Korean American Stories Seldom Heard
1 Introducing the Storytellers: Korean American DACA Recipients
2 The Background Story: Becoming Undocumented in the United States
3 Undocumented Family Stories: Navigating Immigrant Family Dynamics as Narrative Environment
4 Undocumented Stories of Pursuing Education: Navigating Public Schools as Narrative Environments
5 The Silenced Voices: Living under the Shadow of Model Minority Myth
6 Conclusion
4 Seeing the Present: The Violence of Uncertainty, Identity Foreclosure, and the Loss of Narrative Outlook on Life
1 Understanding Uncertainty in the Stories of DACA Recipients
2 The Violence of Uncertainty: When Uncertainty Becomes Everyday Reality
3 Narrative Identity Experiencing and Processing the Violence of Uncertainty Narrative Identity Foreclosure: My Story Is Over
4 The Uncertain Self Experiencing Narrative Foreclosure
5 The Loss of Narrative Outlook on Life
5 Looking Forward: Telling the Religious Stories in the Face of Uncertainty
1 Telling Religious Stories as Religious Coping and Meaning Making
2 Prayer as Telling Religious Stories with God
3 Telling Religious Stories as Pastoral Conversation with Undocumented Young Immigrants
4 Conclusion: Empowering Immigrants to Be Interpreters and Narrators of Their Stories
Bibliography
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction
1 Undocumented Migration as a Theologizing Experience: How Korean American DACA Recipients Make Sense of Their Lives
2 What Is DACA and Why Does It Matter?
3 Why Do the Stories of DACA Recipients Matter? And Why Do They Matter Now?
4 Outline of Chapters
Part 1: Examining Story-Shaped Lives in Pastoral Theology
1 Documenting the Undocumented Stories: Pastoral Theology and Narrative Approaches to Qualitative Research
1 Seeking Care and Justice: The Communal-Contextual Turn in Pastoral Theology
2 Caring through Human Stories: Narrative Turn in Pastoral Theology and Care
3 Documenting the Undocumented Stories of Korean American DACA Recipients
4 Conclusion
2 We Are the Stories We Tell: Narrative Identity Formation and Development
1 The Ethical Narrative Identity Thesis
2 Psychological Perspectives on Narrative Identity
3 Reading Lives: Employing Narrative Identity in Pastoral Theology and Care
4 Religion as Personal Ideology in Self-Narratives
5 Conclusion: Why We Tell Religious Stories
Part 2: Documenting the Undocumented Stories of Korean Americans
3 Looking Back: Uplifting the Korean American Stories Seldom Heard
1 Introducing the Storytellers: Korean American DACA Recipients
2 The Background Story: Becoming Undocumented in the United States
3 Undocumented Family Stories: Navigating Immigrant Family Dynamics as Narrative Environment
4 Undocumented Stories of Pursuing Education: Navigating Public Schools as Narrative Environments
5 The Silenced Voices: Living under the Shadow of Model Minority Myth
6 Conclusion
4 Seeing the Present: The Violence of Uncertainty, Identity Foreclosure, and the Loss of Narrative Outlook on Life
1 Understanding Uncertainty in the Stories of DACA Recipients
2 The Violence of Uncertainty: When Uncertainty Becomes Everyday Reality
3 Narrative Identity Experiencing and Processing the Violence of Uncertainty Narrative Identity Foreclosure: My Story Is Over
4 The Uncertain Self Experiencing Narrative Foreclosure
5 The Loss of Narrative Outlook on Life
5 Looking Forward: Telling the Religious Stories in the Face of Uncertainty
1 Telling Religious Stories as Religious Coping and Meaning Making
2 Prayer as Telling Religious Stories with God
3 Telling Religious Stories as Pastoral Conversation with Undocumented Young Immigrants
4 Conclusion: Empowering Immigrants to Be Interpreters and Narrators of Their Stories
Bibliography
Index