I just want them to own the history
October 11, 2019[…] want them to own the history and make sure everyone is aware, the best they can, in order to dispel the inaccuracies, racism, and myths of the past. I think I first learned about […]
[…] want them to own the history and make sure everyone is aware, the best they can, in order to dispel the inaccuracies, racism, and myths of the past. I think I first learned about […]
We are thrilled to have Adam Miller teach the Dialogue Sunday Gospel Study on Mosiah 11-17 from the “Come Follow Me” manual. Adam S. Miller is a professor of philosophy at Collin College in McKinney, Texas. He earned a BA […]
[…] unprecedented collection of faithful LDS women’s voices while giving them historical context. Both volumes are available free online (churchhistorianspress.org), and some material has also been translated into other languages. Hopefully these works will find […]
[…] 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.
[…] 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.
One summer dusk I floated in the swimming pool as billowing black thunderheads glowered on every horizon, spitting lightning at the earth as night gathered beyond them. I willed the monsoon
[…] have filled many roles: queen, mother, inventor, artist, healer, politician, caretaker, prophet. Women’s voices have been loud and quiet, sometimes invisible but always present, on the vanguard or on the margins, leading, pushing, making change.
[…] 10.2 (Fall 1976, Reprinted Spring/Summer 2001): 67–74 An active church member shares his struggles of being in the church while being gay.“Solus,” S-O-L-US-, latin for alone, by an anonymous gay may in the Fall […]
[…] a sign letting me know what is happening to me,” Alice Walker’s main character Celie writes at the start of The Color Purple.Similarly, Georgia, a real-life Black Mormon woman in current-day Baltimore stands up […]
[…] that Jesus was “the founder of modern business,” and that the Lord favors capitalist economics over united order–style communism (49–51, 67–69). Quinn gestures toward these developments, but it remains for some other researcher to […]