Rachel C. Schneider, Bianca Mabute-Louie, Elaine Howard Ecklund, Denise Daniels
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引用次数: 0
摘要
本文利用具有全国代表性的 "工作中的信仰"(Faith at Work:实证研究》(Faith at Work: An Empirical Study)的深度访谈数据,本文有助于理解宗教在影响对工作场所种族歧视的解释和应对方面所起的作用。具体而言,文章展示了不同种族群体的基督徒如何理解他们的信仰与应对工作场所种族歧视的相关性,并阐明了受访者为 "理解 "工作场所种族歧视所采用的宗教框架。我们发现,有色人种基督徒和白人基督徒主要利用宽恕和神圣主权等宗教框架来应对感知到的歧视,但这些框架的作用各不相同。一些有色人种基督徒还将他们的信仰与在工作场所为自己和他人挺身而出的道德信念联系起来。虽然大多数关于宗教与种族歧视之间联系的研究都侧重于将信仰作为一种个人层面的应对机制和缓冲效应,但本文也分析了宗教对工作场所种族等级制度和种族公平努力的影响--包括重点关注宗教如何产生无知的认识论和支持白人受害者的感觉。我们的研究为不同种族群体的基督徒如何利用信仰应对工作中的种族歧视提供了新的视角,从而为种族歧视与宗教的学术研究做出了贡献。
“Take It to the Lord”: Religion and Responses to Racial Discrimination in the Workplace
Drawing on in-depth interview data from the nationally representative Faith at Work: An Empirical Study, this article contributes to understanding the role of religion in shaping interpretations of and responses to racial discrimination in the workplace. Specifically, it shows how Christians of different racial groups understand the relevance of their faith in coping with perceived racial discrimination in the workplace, and it illuminates the religious frames that respondents employ to “make sense” of perceived racial discrimination at work. We find that Christians of color and White Christians primarily draw on religious frames such as forgiveness and divine sovereignty in response to perceived discrimination but that these frames serve different functions. Some Christians of color also link their faith to a moral conviction to stand up for themselves and others in the workplace. While most studies on the connection between religion and racial discrimination focus on faith as an individual-level coping mechanism and buffering effect, this article also analyzes the implications of religion on racial hierarchies and racial equity efforts in the workplace—including a focus on how religion serves to produce epistemologies of ignorance and support feelings of White victimhood. Our study contributes to the scholarship on racial discrimination and religion by offering new insights into how Christians of different racial groups use faith to cope with perceived racial discrimination at work.