
Graceful Women
In studying this group, Elsberg found women building individual and collective identities and using symbols, narratives, and metaphors to participate in a view of the world that stresses an essential unity beneath the conflicts of contemporary life. A regimen including yoga, meditation, and diet helped the women feel that they could control their responses to everyday stress and manage difficult decisions.
A central focus of the book is the Sikh Dharma ideal of the “graceful woman” and the ways in which this concept both empowers and constrains women. Women are free to choose their degree of engagement in the public sphere: some build careers, some are active in the 3HO community, some dedicate their lives to their families. Work in community businesses allows many women to combine family and work lives. Curtailing this freedom of choice, however, is 3HO’s teaching that women should also be gracious, undemanding, and willing to defer to those in authority.
Elsberg places this movement in the context of other alternative religious organizations and provides a brief history of Sikhism, as well as reviewing events concerning Sikhs today. She explores the range of ways in which gender identities are created, transformed, and contested, particularly as a religion from one part of the world is adopted in a completely different country and culture.
The Author: Constance Waeber Elsberg is professor of sociology and anthropology at Northern Virginia Community College.
- Alaotsikko
- Gender And Identity In An American Sikh Community
- Kirjailija
- Constance Waeber Elsberg
- ISBN
- 9781572332140
- Kieli
- englanti
- Paino
- 600 grammaa
- Julkaisupäivä
- 30.5.2003
- Kustantaja
- University of Tennessee Press
- Sivumäärä
- 352