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Appendix. Religious Organizations Studied and Names of Principal Contact Persons
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Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations vii
- Preface and Acknowledgments ix
-
Part I. Introduction
- Metropolitan Chicago: Places Of Public Religion & Urban Transformation 2
- 1. The New Context of Urban Religion 3
-
Part II. Religion in a City of Neighborhoods
- Pilsen 28
- 2. Hispanic Immigrant Churches and the Construction of Ethnicity 29
- 3. Place, Race, and History: The Social Mission of Downtown Churches 57
- 4. The Churches and the Poor in a “Ghetto Underclass”Neighborhood 83
- 5. “God Doesn’t Ask What Language I Pray In”: Community and Culture on Chicago’s Southwest Side 107
- 6. Communities and Enclaves:Where Jews, Christians, Hindus, and Muslims Share the Neighborhoods 133
- 7. “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ’Round”: The Politics of Race and the New Black Middle-Class Religion 163
- 8. Change, Stress, and Congregations in an Edge-City Technoburb 187
-
Part III. Religion and the New Metropolitan Context
- Residences of Old St. Patrick's Member Households 212
- 9. Catholic Spirituality in a New Urban Church 213
- 10. Recent Immigrant Religions and the Restructuring of Metropolitan Chicago 239
- 11. Catholic Planning for a Multicultural Metropolis, 1982–1996 269
-
Part IV. Epilogue
- Epilogue. Building Religious Communities at the Turn of the Century 293
- Appendix. Religious Organizations Studied and Names of Principal Contact Persons 309
- Bibliography 319
- Contributors 343
- Index 345
Kapitel in diesem Buch
- Frontmatter i
- Contents v
- Illustrations vii
- Preface and Acknowledgments ix
-
Part I. Introduction
- Metropolitan Chicago: Places Of Public Religion & Urban Transformation 2
- 1. The New Context of Urban Religion 3
-
Part II. Religion in a City of Neighborhoods
- Pilsen 28
- 2. Hispanic Immigrant Churches and the Construction of Ethnicity 29
- 3. Place, Race, and History: The Social Mission of Downtown Churches 57
- 4. The Churches and the Poor in a “Ghetto Underclass”Neighborhood 83
- 5. “God Doesn’t Ask What Language I Pray In”: Community and Culture on Chicago’s Southwest Side 107
- 6. Communities and Enclaves:Where Jews, Christians, Hindus, and Muslims Share the Neighborhoods 133
- 7. “Ain’t Gonna Let Nobody Turn Me ’Round”: The Politics of Race and the New Black Middle-Class Religion 163
- 8. Change, Stress, and Congregations in an Edge-City Technoburb 187
-
Part III. Religion and the New Metropolitan Context
- Residences of Old St. Patrick's Member Households 212
- 9. Catholic Spirituality in a New Urban Church 213
- 10. Recent Immigrant Religions and the Restructuring of Metropolitan Chicago 239
- 11. Catholic Planning for a Multicultural Metropolis, 1982–1996 269
-
Part IV. Epilogue
- Epilogue. Building Religious Communities at the Turn of the Century 293
- Appendix. Religious Organizations Studied and Names of Principal Contact Persons 309
- Bibliography 319
- Contributors 343
- Index 345