The Pink Dialogue and Beyond
April 19, 2018[…] not yet learned to question the social structure or the attitudes that kept women out of the world of serious letters. The comment about the Relief Society Magazine hurt; for the first time I […]
[…] not yet learned to question the social structure or the attitudes that kept women out of the world of serious letters. The comment about the Relief Society Magazine hurt; for the first time I […]
[…] be, And by the Lord, for the world is such You can’t just walk straight through, not breaking One commandment or another, They said, and as they told their tales, It was justified by […]
[…] the dressing of the body. I found that I was crying as I read, for all the world as if I had not been the one to shepherd the article through its several stages […]
[…] spiritual kingdom of God on earth. The Church leaders asked the members to separate themselves from the world and “to be self-sustaining; to produce all that is possible .. . at home.” The leaders […]
[…] of religion and the history of philosophy. McMurrin treats ideas not merely as landmarks in a particular world view but as entities that have a life of their own. The genius of his particular […]
[…] starting point for serious moral reflection. McGovern accurately captures the essence of “liberation theology” and other Latin American movements which claim to embody a successful Marxist-Christian alliance. Theologians of liberation, for ex ample invoke […]
[…] in one of the research letters: “Each Saint, will he or nil he, lives in a private world of doctrine, shaped to a great degree by Joseph Smith and his reinterpreters, but shaped much […]
[…] from orthodoxy, a basic disagreement or a sense of alienation which, after inner turmoil, confrontation with the world, and personal growth, leads to recon ciliation and a return to the fold on one’s own […]
[…] was not before. More than this, the metaphor is a statement about our understanding of our existing world, our immediate environment. It is, as well, the mark of our willingness to venture away from […]
[…] parts of us. Poetry is great only in that it suggests action and rouses great emotions. The world gets all its great enthusiasms and emotions from pure strains of sinew. The First Great War, […]