Transcending Mormonism: Transgender Experiences in the LDS Church
March 29, 2023[…] lot of the people I was closest to and had the most similar case to in my online friends community were often trans. And I found that a lot of the music I liked […]
[…] lot of the people I was closest to and had the most similar case to in my online friends community were often trans. And I found that a lot of the music I liked […]
[…] and the Atonement in that period. Searches for “Gethsemane” in the currently available Joseph Smith Papers Project online yield only two results. One is an original manuscript of one of Joseph Smith’s revisions of […]
[…] I’m especially thrilled that we’re able to host hundreds of images that can’t be found anywhere else online. As the only central repository for Book of Mormon art, the catalog seeks to be a […]
[…] surreptitiously placed his fists on his hips in the Superman pose, for he had watched a video online that said doing so can spike one’s testosterone and in turn one’s self-confidence. As he followed […]
[…] Annual Meeting in Independence Missouri, May 27-30. The theme of this year’s conference is “The Home and the Homeland: Families in Diverse Mormon Traditions.” Details and online registration can be found at the MHA website.
We are thrilled to announce a new online resource for the work of Dialogue’s founding editor, Eugene England. Below is the announcement from the Eugene England Foundation: On what would have been Eugene England’s […]
[…] politics. Brooks is also a scholar who also blogs at Religion Dispatches and Ask Mormon Girl, an online community of questioning for Mormons of many stripes. One of the most prominent recurring themes on […]
[…] development of a global Mormon studies community by placing Mormon studies collections (books, journals, and access to online resources) at universities and research centers outside of North America. Donations of books (via the Amazon.com […]
The 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. Then John Bennion contributes a tribute to his ancestor Lucile Cannon Bennion and Gary Bergera examines the cases of two “liberal” professors at BYU during the Wilkinson years, offering new insight into Wilkinson’s modes of thought and management. Other highlights include poetry by Elizabeth Willes, creative nonfiction by A Motley Vision’s William Morris, an Easter homily and a Mother’s Day sermon you will actually like (really!).
[…] this version has not .” Also included is what Jensen calls “the best scanned images I’ve seen online of one of the most important books (the 1833 Book of Commandments) published in Mormon history.”And […]