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  1. The central issue Bush finds in these works is how their authors have dealt with the authority of Mormon Church leaders. As she puts it in her preface, "I ...

  2. Faithful transgressions in the American West : six twentieth-century Mormon women's autobiographical acts by Bush, Laura L., 1963-

  3. Todd Compton; Faithful Transgressions in the American West: Six Twentieth-Century Mormon Women's Autobiographical Acts, Western Historical Quarterly, Volume 37,

  4. 196 Faithful Transgressions in the American West. shows how she rose from marital disappointment, financial hardship, and despair to make possible her children’s formal education and pro-fessional success—all of which she did not have full access to herself.

  5. border crossing that American society both resists and participates in, including geography (east-west, north-south), sexual orientation (het-erosexual, same-sex, bisexual), and religion (Baptist Buddhist; Jewish Muslim). The future [of America] is brown, he writes, as brown as the tarnished past. Brown may be as refreshing as green.

  6. 1 de mar. de 2004 · Laura L. Bush examines six twentieth-century autobiographies by Mormon women--Mary Ann Hafen, Annie Clark Tanner, Wynetta Willis Martin, Terry Tempest Williams, and Phyllis Barber--each of whom adopts a sympathetic, yet critical view of the Mormon religion.

  7. Faithful Transgressions In The American West: Six Twentieth-Century Mormon Women's Autobiographical Acts. Book. Laura L. Bush. 2004. Published by: Utah State University Press. View. summary. The central issue Bush finds in these works is how their authors have dealt with the authority of Mormon Church leaders.