Book

The cultural dynamic of Puerto Rican spiritism: class, nationality, and religion in a Brooklyn ghetto

University Microfilms InternationalAnn Arbor, Mich. • Published In 1992 • Pages:

By: Figueroa, José E..

Abstract
This is an evaluation of the role that spiritism plays in '…enhancing or diminishing both national self awareness and working class consciousness' (p.iv). The data for this study were obtained primarily through participant observation and interviews with Puerto Rican workers in Williamsburg, Brooklyn (New York). Figueroa demonstrates that religion (here spiritism), plays a far more positive and liberating role than the social theories of Karl Marx predict. Figueroa illustrates his theory with several case studies including the collective actions of a group of tenants against their landlord, in which religion (or spiritism) acted as a motivating factor in bringing about change in the structure of everyday life.
Subjects
Social personality
Life history materials
Cultural identity and pride
Renting and leasing
Social relationships and groups
General character of religion
Religious denominations
Ethnosociology
Homosexuality
culture
Puerto Ricans (Mainland)
HRAF PubDate
2002
Region
North America
Sub Region
Regional, Ethnic and Diaspora Cultures
Document Type
Book
Evaluation
Creator Types
Ethnologist
Indigenous Person
Document Rating
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
John Beierle ; 1992
Field Date
mid-1970s -- four years (p.27)
Coverage Date
mid-1970s
Coverage Place
Williamsburg, Brooklyn; New York, N.Y., United States
Notes
[by] José E. Figueroa
UM AAC8203279
Bibliography: p. 251-260
Thesis (Ph.D.) -- City University of New York, 1981
LCSH
Puerto Ricans--New York (N.Y.)--Religion