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This short book follows two sets of missionaries in South America, the Japanese fundamentalist Christian religion Makuya, and the new religion Tenri-kyo, among Japanese immigrant communities in Brazil and Paraguay. We see these newcomer immigrant missionaries who arrived in South America during the 1980s as they assimilate socially and culturally, constructing social environments needed to adapt both within and without their diasporic communities. In particular, the book analyzes processes of social adaption and the web of introductions they employ to access jobs, homes and marriage partners.…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
This short book follows two sets of missionaries in South America, the Japanese fundamentalist Christian religion Makuya, and the new religion Tenri-kyo, among Japanese immigrant communities in Brazil and Paraguay. We see these newcomer immigrant missionaries who arrived in South America during the 1980s as they assimilate socially and culturally, constructing social environments needed to adapt both within and without their diasporic communities. In particular, the book analyzes processes of social adaption and the web of introductions they employ to access jobs, homes and marriage partners. Japanese began to migrate to Brazil in 1908 and have created there the largest overseas community of Japanese in the world.
Autorenporträt
Christopher Reichl ist Anthropologe und lehrt an der Universität von Hawaii in Hilo. Er promovierte in Anthropologie an der University of Iowa und hat sich auf Linguistik, Japanologie und die Erforschung der japanischen Diaspora spezialisiert: Japaner in Brasilien und auf Hawaii.