TY - JOUR
T1 - Cosmopolitanism : religion and kinship among young people in south-western Sydney
AU - Turner, Bryan S.
AU - Halse, Christine
AU - Sriprakash, Arathi
PY - 2014
Y1 - 2014
N2 - Debates about globalization have been accompanied by considerable critical assessment of the notion of cosmopolitanism. The upsurge in travel, trade, communication, and resettlement among non-elite individuals and groups has raised questions about the nature and form of 'bottom-up' or 'vernacular' cosmopolitanism. This article explores the ways in which the experiences of a group of young people (12-15 years of age) in south-western Sydney contribute to shared practices of membership in a culturally differentiated society. On one level, these young people display a de facto vernacular cosmopolitanism through familial experiences of migration. However, the article shows how these young people often move within socially and culturally bounded communities defined by ethnicity, language, socio-economic status, shaped by desires for safety, support and belonging, and maintained by propinquity, religion and the persistence of traditional expectations and patterns around gender and inter-marriage.
AB - Debates about globalization have been accompanied by considerable critical assessment of the notion of cosmopolitanism. The upsurge in travel, trade, communication, and resettlement among non-elite individuals and groups has raised questions about the nature and form of 'bottom-up' or 'vernacular' cosmopolitanism. This article explores the ways in which the experiences of a group of young people (12-15 years of age) in south-western Sydney contribute to shared practices of membership in a culturally differentiated society. On one level, these young people display a de facto vernacular cosmopolitanism through familial experiences of migration. However, the article shows how these young people often move within socially and culturally bounded communities defined by ethnicity, language, socio-economic status, shaped by desires for safety, support and belonging, and maintained by propinquity, religion and the persistence of traditional expectations and patterns around gender and inter-marriage.
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/547514
U2 - 10.1177/1440783311419052
DO - 10.1177/1440783311419052
M3 - Article
SN - 1440-7833
VL - 50
SP - 83
EP - 98
JO - Journal of Sociology
JF - Journal of Sociology
IS - 2
ER -