Learning to Speak a New Tongue

Imagining a Way that Holds People Together—An Asian American Conversation

Nonfiction, Religion & Spirituality
Cover of the book Learning to Speak a New Tongue by Fumitaka Matsuoka, Wipf and Stock Publishers
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Author: Fumitaka Matsuoka ISBN: 9781498270021
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers Publication: September 14, 2011
Imprint: Pickwick Publications Language: English
Author: Fumitaka Matsuoka
ISBN: 9781498270021
Publisher: Wipf and Stock Publishers
Publication: September 14, 2011
Imprint: Pickwick Publications
Language: English

Learning to Speak a New Tongue attempts to respond to a timely question facing America today: What holds people together in a fragmented world? The response comes from a religious community that has not been very visible: Asian Americans. The author employs the threefold epistemological scaffold familiar to Asian Americans: (1) translocal value orientation embedded in the experiences of racialization, (2) a heightened sensitivity to pathos arising out of our dissonance with the societal norms and values, and (3) amphibolous spirituality, that is, a co-existence of multiple religious traditions without any resolution of their differences. The angle of vision embedded in this epistemological framework of Asian Americans' lives may well provide a clue to an alternate architectural paradigm in building a new peoplehood and to redefine democratic freedom as the historical paradigm of American peoplehood.

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Learning to Speak a New Tongue attempts to respond to a timely question facing America today: What holds people together in a fragmented world? The response comes from a religious community that has not been very visible: Asian Americans. The author employs the threefold epistemological scaffold familiar to Asian Americans: (1) translocal value orientation embedded in the experiences of racialization, (2) a heightened sensitivity to pathos arising out of our dissonance with the societal norms and values, and (3) amphibolous spirituality, that is, a co-existence of multiple religious traditions without any resolution of their differences. The angle of vision embedded in this epistemological framework of Asian Americans' lives may well provide a clue to an alternate architectural paradigm in building a new peoplehood and to redefine democratic freedom as the historical paradigm of American peoplehood.

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