EPISODE · Aug 7, 2007
Peggy Levitt Interview
from Weekly Signals Interviews
Peggy Levitt, Chair and Associate Professor in the Department of Sociology at Wellesley College, discusses her book God Needs No Passport: Immigrants and the Changing American Religious Landscape. Levitt argues that current debates about religion and immigration are based on assumptions that are out-of-sync with our national reality because they fail to grasp the strong connection between changes in immigration and changes in religious life. When we talk about how religion influences American culture and politics, we still really mean Protestantism. When we think about what religion is, where we look for it, and how it works we tend to think in traditional terms. Jewish and Catholic colors are included though they hardly dominate the design. Islam, Hinduism, and Buddhism are barely visible. Today’s immigrants, however, are remaking the religious landscape by introducing new faith traditions and Asianizing and Latinoizing old ones. They don’t trade in their home-country membership card but challenge the taken-for-granted dichotomy between either/or, United States or homeland, and assimilation vs. multiculturalism by showing it is possible to be several things simultaneously and, in fact, required in a global world. Recorded August 7, 2007
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Peggy Levitt Interview
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