The Hybrid Tsinoys: Challenges of Hybridity and Homogeneity as Sociocultural Constructs among the Chinese in the Philippines - eBook
Stock No: WW110037EB
The Hybrid Tsinoys: Challenges of Hybridity and Homogeneity as Sociocultural Constructs among the Chinese in the Philippines - eBook  -     By: Juliet Lee Uytanlet

The Hybrid Tsinoys: Challenges of Hybridity and Homogeneity as Sociocultural Constructs among the Chinese in the Philippines - eBook

Pickwick Publications / 2016 / ePub

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Stock No: WW110037EB

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In Stock
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Pickwick Publications / 2016 / ePub
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Product Information

Title: The Hybrid Tsinoys: Challenges of Hybridity and Homogeneity as Sociocultural Constructs among the Chinese in the Philippines - eBook
By: Juliet Lee Uytanlet
Format: DRM Free ePub
Vendor: Pickwick Publications
Publication Date: 2016
ISBN: 9781498229067
ISBN-13: 9781498229067
Series: American Society of Missiology Monograph
Stock No: WW110037EB

Publisher's Description

The Hybrid Tsinoys is a study of hybridity and homogeneity as sociocultural constructs in the development of current ethnic identity/ies of Chinese Filipinos. This study employs a descriptive ethnographic research method to discover how they see or define themselves in terms of ethnicity (Chinese, Filipino, or both) and how their perspectives affect other aspects of their lives (language, marriage, and family). The research proposes that there are different kinds of Chinese Filipinos as evidenced in the six classifications in chapter 4. Further, most of them have constructed a hybrid culture exclusively and uniquely their own. On the one hand, they are still attached to their cultural roots; on the other hand, they cannot evade the fact that they are influenced by their host country and the present global and migratory age we live in. Second-, third-, and fourth-generation Chinese Filipinos demonstrate their hybridity in language and mindset. This dissertation also lays out some challenges in relation to doing mission among them.

Author Bio

Juliet Lee Uytanlet finished her PhD in Intercultural Studies in 2014 at Asbury Theological Seminary in Wilmore, Kentucky. She and her husband, Samson L. Uytanlet, are currently faculty of Biblical Seminary of the Philippines. She teaches Global Missions and Urban Missions.

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