Intermarriage across Race and Ethnicity among Immigrants: E Pluribus UnionsPosted in Books, Family/Parenting, Media Archive, Monographs, Social Science on 2009-11-21 04:10Z by Steven |
Intermarriage across Race and Ethnicity among Immigrants: E Pluribus Unions
LFB Scholarly Publishing
November 2008
228 pages
5.5 X 8.5 / viii
Hardcover ISBN-13: 978-1-59332-294-6
Charlie V. Morgan, Assistant Professor of Sociology
Brigham Young University
Morgan examines the relationship between assimilation and intermarriage. In studying mixed relationships, he finds that ethnicity, in the form of language and religion, is more important than race. Males and females were more likely to find themselves in coethnic relationships as they imagined the role that extended family would play. They talked about parental prejudices, language, religion, and other cultural clashes as major factors. There were many females, however, who did not follow this pattern because of perceptions of patriarchy. They avoided coethnic relationships because they wanted a partner who would think of them as an equal.