Item Detail
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30819
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8
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0
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English
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Theorizing Mormon Race Scholarship
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Journal of Mormon History
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July 2015
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41
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3
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Champaign, IL
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University of Illinois Press ; Mormon History Association
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Mormon history has been somewhat remiss in its lack of attention to the theoretical, particularly as it confronts questions of race. Aware of this gap, this introduction urges that we reframe our conversations about race, whiteness, colonialism, and power and that we draw on contemporary and racial theories that intersect with our historical preoccupations so that we can more fully articulate and understand Mormonism’s cultural impact in diverse contexts. I therefore shape this introduction to present some dynamic social theories from the literature that might be helpful in both making sense of this volume and encouraging further conversations. [From the text]
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A Brief History of the Mormon Smile
Aloha in Diné Bikéyah : Mormon Hawaiians and Navajos, 1949 to 1990
Diné dóó Gáamalii: Navajo Latter-day Saint Experiences in the Twentieth Century
Essays on American Indian and Mormon History
Mormon Conquest : Whites and Natives in the Intermountain West
Mormonism and Race
Not a Country or a Stereotype: Latina LDS Experiences of Ethnic Homogenization and Racial Tokenism in the American West
Other Scriptures : Restoring Voices of Gantowisas to an Open Canon