Kenneth J. Guest
Assistant Professor of Anthropology.
Baruch College, CUNY
Voice: 646 312-4477
Fax: 646 312-4461
Email: Ken_Guest@baruch.cuny.edu
Office: Room 4-271, 55 Lexington Ave.
Kenneth J. Guest is the author of God in Chinatown: Religion and
Survival in New York’s Evolving Immigrant Community (NYU Press,
2003) which addresses the role of religious communities in the recent
migration of Fuzhounese from southeast China to New York City, the creation
of transnational religious networks, and the effects of this migration
on the religious revival sweeping coastal China.
His research focuses on China, New York City, immigration, religion,
and transnationalism. He has conducted fieldwork in China and the US.
Professor Guest is a graduate of Columbia University (B.A., East Asian
Studies); Union Theological Seminary (M.A., Religious Studies); and
The City University of New York Graduate Center (M.A., M.Phil., Ph.D.,
Anthropology).
Recent publications:
Ethnic Enclaves and Cultural Diversity (with Peter Kwong)
In Cultural Diversity in the US: A Critical Reader. Ida Susser
and Thomas C. Patterson, eds., Pp. 250-266. Oxford: Blackwell Publishers
Ltd, 2000.
Transnational Religious Networks among New York’s Fuzhou Immigrants.
In Religion Across Borders: Transnational Immigrant Networks. Helen
Rose Ebaugh and Janet Chafetz, eds., Pp. 149-163. Walnut Creek, CA:
Altamira Press, 2002.
Lives in the Balance: Youth and Liminality Among Recent Chinese
Undocumented Immigrant Workers In Asian American Religions:
Borders and Boundaries. Tony Carnes and Fenggang Yang, eds.
New York: NYU Press, 2003.