In the past twenty years, many traditionally white campus religious groups have become Asian American. Today there are more than fifty evangelical Christian groups at UC Berkeley and UCLA alone, and 80% of their members are Asian American. At Harvard, Asian Americans constitute 70% of the Harvard Radcliffe Christian Fellowship, while at Yale, Campus Crusade for Christ is now 90% Asian. Stanford’s Intervarsity Christian Fellowship has become almost entirely Asian.
There has been little research, or even acknowledgment, of this striking development.
God’s New Whiz Kids? focuses on second-generation Korean Americans, who make up the majority of Asian American evangelicals, and explores the factors that lead college-bound Korean American evangelicals—from integrated, mixed race neighborhoods—to create racially segregated religious communities on campus. Kim illuminates an emergent “made in the U.S.A.” ethnicity to help explain this trend, and to shed light on a group that may be changing the face of American evangelicalism.
Über den Autor
Rebecca Y. Kim is Professor of Sociology and the Director of the Ethnic Studies program at Pepperdine University, where she holds the Frank R. Seaver Chair in Social Science. She is the author of God’s New Whiz Kids? Second-generation Korean American Evangelicals on Campus and The Spirit Moves West: Korean Missionaries in America, and co-author of Estranged Pioneers: Race, Faith and Leadership in a Diverse World.