%0 Book %A Hemchand Gossai %A Jung Eun Sophia Park %D 2011 %C New York, United States of America %I Peter Lang Verlag %@ 9781453901908 %T A Hermeneutic on Dislocation as Experience %B Creating a Borderland, Constructing a Hybrid Identity %R 10.3726/978-1-4539-0190-8 %U https://www.peterlang.com/document/1051135 %X Dislocation, which involves moving from a familiar place to an unknown place, is a common experience in this era of globalization yet it can cause a deep sense of alienation – people feel invisible, voiceless, and anonymous. A Hermeneutic on Dislocation as Experience: Creating a Borderland, Constructing a Hybrid Identity employs socio-rhetorical criticism from a postcolonial perspective, providing a hermeneutic on the experience of dislocation from the perspective of Asian immigrant women. The author’s focus on Asian immigrant women’s spirituality is interwoven with different texts such as the story of a woman caught in adultery (Jn. 7: 53-8:11), Asian immigrant women’s stories in the novels Dictee and Crossings, and stories of Korean shamans encountered in the author’s ethnographic fieldwork. This book suggests that people who experience dislocation can create a borderland where their own marginality gains power and voice. In that borderland, they are able to construct a hybrid identity as a result of deep engagement with one another. In particular, the author’s fieldwork on Korean shamans reveals how the shamanic ritual itself functions as a borderland, wherein the marginalized Korean shamans gain hybrid identity. A Hermeneutic on Dislocation as Experience is a valuable resource for classes in Asian studies, ethnography, cultural anthropology, biblical spirituality, women’s spirituality, and interdisciplinary courses. %K ritual studies, interdisciplinary studies, socio-rhetorical criticism, women's sprituality, Asian women's studies, postcolonial stuides, borderland theory, woman caught in adultery (Jn. 7: 53-81), Bibical spirituality, hybridity %G English