Transnational
- CommentaryWhat’s So Wrong with Mindfulness?This article originally appeared in Tricycle. “I was stressed out, burned out, and divorced. And then I started doing yoga.” This is how many people I have spoken to in the course …Topics: Buddhists and Buddhism, Creativity and Innovation, Meditation and Prayer, Transnational
- CommentaryTraditional and Innovative – How Korean Buddhism Stays RelevantSouth Korea has become most widely known for its rapidly growing Christian population in the recent past, but nearly a quarter of the country’s population identify as Buddhist. (A majority of the …Topics: Asia, Buddhists and Buddhism, Creativity and Innovation, Korea, Transnational
- CommentaryMade in Los Angeles – How One Church Changed With Its CommunityAt her old church, church leaders looked “at me like a sinner for plucking my eyebrows!” remembered Sonia. The church’s gender-specific regulations, imported from the congregation’s mother church in El Salvador, also …Topics: Community Dynamics, Creativity and Innovation, Latinos, Millennials, Pentecostals and Pentecostalism, Place and Religion, Southern California, Transnational
- VideoHow Pentecostals Create Transnational Networks
- VideoGod Needs No Passport: Immigrants and the Changing American Religious Landscape, by Peggy Levitt
- videoThe Left Eye of God: Caodaism Travels From Vietnam to CAThe Left Eye of God: Caodaism Travels From Vietnam to CA View the trailer for the film by Janet Hoskins (Producer) and Susan Hoskins (Director). The documentary was filmed with support from …Topics: Transnational
- CommentaryExploring Religious Identities in a New LandAn interview with Janet Hoskins. Tim Sato recently interviewed Janet Hoskins, professor of anthropology, a member of CRCC’s Academic Advisory Council. With Macarena Gomez Barris, Prof. Hoskins will convene a CRCC seminar on “Transnational Charisma and Traveling Spirits: How Religion Moves across a Global Landscape” during the 2009-2010 academic year.Topics: Asia, Buddhists and Buddhism, Transnational