Lester E. Bush Jr. (1942-2023)
November 23, 2023[…] family from all of us at Dialogue. He will be greatly missed. Please see his author page for a list of his important, impactful scholarly works at Dialogue. We are pleased to present this […]
[…] family from all of us at Dialogue. He will be greatly missed. Please see his author page for a list of his important, impactful scholarly works at Dialogue. We are pleased to present this […]
[…] a racializing civilizational assemblage in order to recenter the production and management of unexceptional . . . queer subjects” ( 305). Historians, Mohrman prods, have only fulfilled such an agenda when they reaffirm its narrative. Mohrman backs […]
[…] and came about through “womanist and intersectional approaches” and realizations in the field when conducting interviews ( 3–5). Here is where Kline’s positionality discussion becomes most relevant and reveals the limiting nature of her […]
[…] wings they can fly again, the length of the next generation’s journey to their summer home in Canada, the fallow fields, the sustaining sweetness of Manitoba milkweed; iv. up— the pulsing quasars, the Light-ladened […]
[…] demonstrates an application of this technique. The history begins with a list of topics to be c overed in the larger work. “Smith’s method of using a preliminary outline…” Davis explains, “was a standard […]
Dialogue 26. 3 (Summer 1995):163–180
FOR TRADITION-MINDED MEMBERS of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday Saints the Book of Mormon’s historicity is a given: Book of Mormon events actually occurred and its ancient participants […]
Dialogue 17. 3 (Fall 1984): 37–75
As one step in that direction, this article explores Book of Mormon usage in the pre-Utah period (1830—46), and seeks answers to the following questions: Which passages from […]
Dialogue 34.4 (Winter 2002): 143–145Sometimes, I seem to be the only person in the entire church who knows that it’s okay to believe in evolution and still be a faithful, believing Mormon.
Dialogue 8.3/4 (1973): 4– 6
The divergence of science and religion is essentially a modern phenomenon. Until the 18th century, theology was considered the queen of the sciences and scientists considered that their discoveries […]
Dialogue 12.2 (Summer 1979): 82–91
Any constitutional amendment unavoidably casts a shadow of uncertaintyover its future interpretation and implementation. The Fourteenth Amendment, for example, has far exceeded the originally perceived purpose—elevating thestatus of blacks—and has […]