FAQs
July 20, 2022[…] I’m a library representative, how we do get institutional pricing and access? We are now completely free online so you can set up links to dialoguejournal.com for all the digital content. For print copies, […]
[…] I’m a library representative, how we do get institutional pricing and access? We are now completely free online so you can set up links to dialoguejournal.com for all the digital content. For print copies, […]
[…] to deny power and privilege to women and individuals at the margins. Symbols are adaptable, but in order to stop using symbolic womanhood as a weapon to silence women, we have to be willing […]
[…] Eliza R. Snow, polygamous wife to both Joseph Smith and Brigham Young. Her status in the patriarchal order of the Church gave her significant credibility in her poetry and theology. For many, Eliza R. […]
Dialogue 55.1 (Spring 2022): 37 Marginalizing God the Mother does not solve the problems raised by Mormonism’s doctrine of divine and human embodiment. It merely diminishes femaleness as a reflection of divinity. We do […]
[…] of light” where LDS Church members will be directed to gather together away from their homes in order to seek refuge during tumultuous times, as well as the destruction of both the East and […]
[…] through a pile of novels long enough to find one they like. We hoped that a three-minute online read would feel low-risk enough that people would give it a shot. What people have done […]
Spring 2012 Issue opens with a feisty stack of letters to Dialogue before delving into Shawn Tucker’s exploration of Mormonism’s contribution to the “Virtues and Vices” tradition in various religious and philosophical schools of thought.
[…] web format of this article as a courtesy. There may be unintentional differences from the printed version. For citational and bibliographical purposes, please use the printed version or the PDFs provided online and on JSTOR.
[…] intense joys and sorrows of mortality” as we “learn to strive, to seek, and to struggle” in order to “discover truths about God and ourselves.”[1] As we come to know the intense joys and […]
[…] exile—not to follow them, mind you, and certainly not to model them or copy them, but in order to become poets ourselves, creators of worlds. Like Whitman at the end of “Song of Myself,” […]