Item Detail
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26417
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0
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21
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English
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From Galatia to Ghana : The Racial Dynamic in Mormon History
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International Journal of Mormon Studies
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2013
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6
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United Kingdom
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International Journal of Mormon Studies
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54-73
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This article discusses the history of race relations within the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, specifically focusing on blacks and their ability or lack thereof to hold the priesthood. The author attempts to promote understanding of the previous policies that seem so discriminatory by providing the historical context of the time. He goes on to describe the Church's growth in Africa and how this was affected by the past policies.
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All Abraham's Children : Changing Mormon Conceptions of Race and Lineage
Brigham Young Addresses [1836-1877]
Brigham Young : Pioneer Prophet
In Search of Ephraim : Traditional Mormon Conceptions of Lineage and Race
Lengthen Your Stride : The Presidency of Spencer W. Kimball
Mormon America : The Power and the Promise
Mormonism and Secular Attitudes toward Negroes
Mormonism and the Negro : Faith, Folklore, and Civil Rights
Mormonism in the Nineteen-Seventies : The Popular Perception
Mormonism's Negro Doctrine : An Historical Overview
Neither White nor Black : Mormon Scholars Confront the Race Issue in a Universal Church
Saints, Slaves, and Blacks : The Changing Place of Black People within Mormonism
Shifting Borders and a Tattered Passport :
Intellectual journeys of a Mormon academic
The Dawning of a Brighter Day : The Church in Black Africa
The Ebb and Flow of Mormonism in Scotland, 1840-1900
The Japanese Missionary Journal of Elder Alma O. Taylor 1901-10
The Mormon Priesthood Revelation and the Sao Paulo, Brazil Temple
The Mormon World
The Trial of Don Pedro Leon Lujan : The Attack Against Indian Slavery and Mexican Traders in Utah
The True Policy for Utah : Servitude, Slavery, and "An Act in Relation to Service"
Would-Be Saints : West Africa before the 1978 Priesthood Revelation