The Polygamous Wives Writing Club: From the Diaries of Mormon Pioneer Women
Autor Paula Kelly Harlineen Limba Engleză Hardback – 9 iul 2014
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9780199346509
ISBN-10: 019934650X
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 55 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 166 x 239 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
ISBN-10: 019934650X
Pagini: 256
Ilustrații: 55 illustrations
Dimensiuni: 166 x 239 x 23 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Editura: Oxford University Press
Colecția OUP USA
Locul publicării:New York, United States
Recenzii
What I liked most about The Polygamous Wives Writing Club was its effort to let ordinary women speak for themselves. These arent the women youve heard of from church history, the Relief Society presidents and wives of general authorities. These are just ordinary folks for whom plural marriage was often an emotional and financial trial
Senior editor Theo Calderara identifies Paula Kelly Harline's The Polgamous Wives Writing Club: From the Diariesof Mormon Pioneer Women as one of the press's top-selling religion books of 2014.
This book restores an essential chapter in Mormon history. Since the days of our polygamous foremothers, Mormon women have been stereotyped as voiceless victims and dupes. By digging into the heart history of Mormon polygamy through the writings of the women who lived it, Paula Kelly Harline shows that Mormon women have wrestled with the unique demands of our faith with a full range of human motivations and feelings: grace and conflict, acquiescence and resistance, vocal criticism and quiet acceptance, pride and dejection, confidence and frustration. Is polygamy really a core element of Mormon theology? Harline offers both powerful commentary on this unresolved question that still weighs on so many Mormons, as well as a richly detailed history of Mormon womens lives. Intimate and important, this is a Mormon studies must-read
Paula Harlines treatment is a revealing if painful look into the profoundly rooted contradictions of Mormon plural marriage: she shows it to be a practice wives publicly defended while privately lamenting; one that fostered solidarity with a sisterhood burdened with the principle, even as it fomented rivalries and sorrows within those marriages; and a practice that left a conflicting legacy of pride in the sacrifice polygamists endured, along with a persisting unease with the teachings and practices themselves
Harline has done a great service in bringing together these narratives linking the high spiritual aims and the excruciating realities of a practice that cut to the core of women's lives. Harlines clear-eyed and tempered analysis contextualizes the very personal voices of the past
Senior editor Theo Calderara identifies Paula Kelly Harline's The Polgamous Wives Writing Club: From the Diariesof Mormon Pioneer Women as one of the press's top-selling religion books of 2014.
This book restores an essential chapter in Mormon history. Since the days of our polygamous foremothers, Mormon women have been stereotyped as voiceless victims and dupes. By digging into the heart history of Mormon polygamy through the writings of the women who lived it, Paula Kelly Harline shows that Mormon women have wrestled with the unique demands of our faith with a full range of human motivations and feelings: grace and conflict, acquiescence and resistance, vocal criticism and quiet acceptance, pride and dejection, confidence and frustration. Is polygamy really a core element of Mormon theology? Harline offers both powerful commentary on this unresolved question that still weighs on so many Mormons, as well as a richly detailed history of Mormon womens lives. Intimate and important, this is a Mormon studies must-read
Paula Harlines treatment is a revealing if painful look into the profoundly rooted contradictions of Mormon plural marriage: she shows it to be a practice wives publicly defended while privately lamenting; one that fostered solidarity with a sisterhood burdened with the principle, even as it fomented rivalries and sorrows within those marriages; and a practice that left a conflicting legacy of pride in the sacrifice polygamists endured, along with a persisting unease with the teachings and practices themselves
Harline has done a great service in bringing together these narratives linking the high spiritual aims and the excruciating realities of a practice that cut to the core of women's lives. Harlines clear-eyed and tempered analysis contextualizes the very personal voices of the past
Notă biografică
Paula Kelly Harline has been teaching college writing for over 20 years for the University of Idaho, Brigham Young University, and Utah Valley University. She has also worked as a freelance writer and artist. She currently lives with her husband, Craig, in Provo, Utah.