Cover image for Life Lines : Community, Family, and Assimilation among Asian Indian Immigrants.
Life Lines : Community, Family, and Assimilation among Asian Indian Immigrants.
Title:
Life Lines : Community, Family, and Assimilation among Asian Indian Immigrants.
Author:
Bacon, Jean.
ISBN:
9780195356694
Personal Author:
Physical Description:
1 online resource (314 pages)
Contents:
Contents -- 1. Introduction -- I: Public Life -- 2. The Question of Worldview -- 3. Organizational Life in the Indian Community -- 4. Organizations of the Second Generation -- 5. Problems Talk: The Rhetoric of Adjustment in the Immigrant Press -- II: Family Portraits -- 6. Family Life -- 7. The Nagars: Duty and Heart -- 8. The lyengars: Historical Indians -- 9. The Kumars: Compromise -- 10. The Shenoys: Alternative Identities -- 11. The Shankars: Searching for a Close Family -- III: Family and Community -- 12. Families: A Model of Intergenerational Change -- 13. Families and Organizations: A Division of Labor in Support of Community -- Appendix A. Organizations of the Indian Community -- Appendix B. Some Notes on Method -- Notes -- Index -- A -- B -- C -- D -- E -- F -- G -- H -- I -- K -- L -- M -- N -- O -- P -- R -- S -- T -- U -- V -- W -- X -- Y.
Abstract:
Asian Indians figure prominently among the educated, middle class subset of contemporary immigrants. They move quickly into residences, jobs, and lifestyles that provide little opportunity with fellow migrants, yet they continue to see themselves as a distinctive community within contemporary American society. In Life Lines Bacon chronicles the creation of a community--Indian-born parents and their children living in the Chicago metropolitan area--bound by neither geographic proximity, nor institutional ties, and explores the processes through which ethnic identity is transmitted to the next generation. Bacon's study centers upon the engrossing portraits of five immigrant families, each one a complex tapestry woven from the distinctive voices of its family members. Both extensive field work among community organizations and analyses of ethnic media help Bacon expose the complicated interplay between the private social interactions of family life and the stylized rhetoric of "Indianness" that permeates public life. This inventive analysis suggests that the process of assimilation which these families undergo parallels the assimilation process experienced by anyone who conceives of him or herself as a member of a distinctive community in search of a place in American society.
Local Note:
Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2017. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.
Electronic Access:
Click to View
Holds: Copies: