Item Detail
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13745
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14
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0
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English
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From Racist Stereotype to Ethnic Identity : Instrumental Uses of Mormon Racial Doctrine
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Ethnohistory
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Summer 1999
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46
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no.3
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451-80
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Racism in the Mormon Church is examined, especially the ability of the Church to convert dark-skinned people in Mexico in the early 20th century. Because of the teachings of the Book of Mormon, their lives have been redefined. The racial and ethnic passages, however, sometimes have had different interpretations which are discussed in this article. A recommendation was made that all religious institutions analyze their doctrines of ethnic and racial differences.
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A Frontier Life : Jacob Hamblin, Explorer and Indian Missionary
All Abraham's Children : Changing Mormon Conceptions of Race and Lineage
Aloha in Diné Bikéyah : Mormon Hawaiians and Navajos, 1949 to 1990
American Apocrypha : Essays on the Book of Mormon
Amerindian Identity, the Book of Mormon, and the American Dream
Essays on American Indian and Mormon History
Indigenizing Mormonisms
Lions, Brothers, and the Idea of an Indian Nation : The Mexican Revolution in the Minds of Anthony W. Ivins and Rey L. Pratt, 1910-1917
Not a Country or a Stereotype: Latina LDS Experiences of Ethnic Homogenization and Racial Tokenism in the American West
Remembering Iosepa : History, Place, and Religion in the American West
The Book of Mormon as Amerindian Apocalypse
The Book of Mormon as Amerindian Apocalypse
Transformation of the Mormon Culture Region