
Making Home
Faith, Love and the Politics of Belonging in Japanese-Filipino Families
Mario Lopez(Author)
NUS Press
Will be published approx. on 30. June 2026
Book
Hardback
216 pages
978-981-325-329-2 (ISBN)
Description
How do faith, family, and migration intersect in the intimate lives of transnational couples? This ethnography examines Japanese-Filipino marriages in contemporary Japan to reveal how gendered Catholic practices, cultural negotiation, and the politics of belonging shape everyday life. Set in Northern Kyushu, this ethnography explores the often tense dynamics of these relationships-how love, faith, and social expectations are navigated across multiple domains. Through long-term fieldwork, it shows how Filipino migrants and their Japanese partners create "contact zones" where faith becomes both a resource for connection and a site of struggle. Religion, far from being a private matter, becomes a powerful tool for migrants to sustain family ties, negotiate identities, and transform the intimate spaces they live in. Centering religious practices within migration studies, this book offers fresh insights into the evolving landscape of transnational families in Japan.
Reviews / Votes
"Written with the care and sensitivity typical of Lopez' work, Making Home places faith and intimacy at the heart of Japanese-Filipino family life. Exemplifying the value of slow ethnography, it opens new and compelling ways of thinking about affect, marriage, and migration in Japan." - Jamie Coates, University of Sheffield"Allow this book to welcome you to the intimate spaces of Filipino and Japanese marriages in Japan. An essential read for migration studies scholars, Mario provides us entry into the everyday lives of Filipinos in Japan and how their faith navigates these spaces. Key to this brilliant work is how readers can see the religious reflections of their Japanese partners. This slow research will inspire younger scholars to hopefully do the same." - Karl Ian Uy Cheng Chua, Asian Center, University of the Philippines-Diliman
"This book examines how Filipino migrant wives employ their religious faith as a form of agentive and persuasive power and re-negotiate and transform their affective relations with their Japanese husbands. The result is a very readable ethnography based on compelling personal narratives about how migrant religiosity influences intimate familial contexts." - Takeyuki Tsuda, Arizona State University
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
Singapore
Singapore
Illustrations
9 Graphs - 1 Maps - 5 Halftones, unspecified
Dimensions
Height: 229 mm
Width: 152 mm
ISBN-13
978-981-325-329-2 (9789813253292)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Mario Lopez is an anthropologist and migration specialist based at the Center for Southeast Asian Studies (CSEAS), Kyoto University