The Fading Curse of Cain: Mormonism in South Africa
April 9, 2018Dialogue 27.4 (Winter 1994): 41–56
White South African Church members’s perspectives on racial issues in the context of Apartheid.
Dialogue 27.4 (Winter 1994): 41–56
White South African Church members’s perspectives on racial issues in the context of Apartheid.
[…] Patty Lou got together some table scraps from the kitchen and went out to the barn to feed the dogs. She’d tripped over one and sprained her wrist a few years ago, and she […]
Something wants spiritual
yet hesitates, not wanting to show a lack
of substance intellect
to not win at tennis or good looks
Dialogue 28.3 (Fall 1995): 1–12
As American feminist thinkers and organizers, we’ve walked a long road since then, a road that has led us farther and farther away from religious discourse and Christian justification. Our reasons have been good: We didn’t want to limit or exclude. We didn’t want to direct all feminists down a single philosophical path.
[…] said, “Linda, it is cancer. The breast will have to be removed.” I said, “How will I feed my babies?” He gently but firmly replied, “Linda, there will be no more babies,” but the […]
[…] is an indeterminately large number of people, in and out of Mormonism, who hunger for something to feed their souls, those of whom Milton said, “The hungry sheep look up and are not fed.” […]
[…] Peace (Salt Lake City: Bookcraft, 1969), 266; Encyclopedia, 1:116-17. [39] John Bongaarts, “Can the Growing Human Population Feed Itself?” Scientific American 270 (Mar. 1994): 36-43. [40] Eugene Linden, “Showdown in Cairo,” Time 144 (4 […]
[…] seek fulfillment as wives and mothers. Advice abounded on how to catch and keep a man, breast feed children, and handle toilet training, sibling rivalry, and adolescent rebellion. Mormon literature correlated with other publications […]
I arrived in San Diego the day before Christmas to visit my mother and to clean out her garage. I am the fourth of seven children, most of whom live much farther away than L.A.…
[…] tall as a tree but taller than alfalfa depending upon the soil where it grows. For horse feed it’s unsurpassed, makes horses hard and tough so they do little sweating while working.” He commended […]