For mission as a gendered enterprise, see Dorothy L. Hodgson, The Church of Women (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2005); Hyaeweol Choi, Gender and Mission Encounters in Korea (Berkeley: University of California Press, ...
... ed., Where God Reigns (Accra-North: Ghana Sam-Woode Ltd., 1996); Eliza F. Kent, Converting Women (New York: Oxford University Press, 2004); Dorothy L. Hodgson, The Church of Women (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2005).
Glen Allen, “A Church in Crisis,” Maclean 's, November 27, 1989, p. 66; Glen Allen, “Breaking the Faith,” Maclean 's, July 30, 1990, pp. 16—17. 29. Harris, Unholy Orders. 30. Allen, “Breaking the Faith”; Gary Kinsman, “The Mount Cashel ...
As early as 1931, Frederick Lewis Allen published Only Yesterday, a still-valued history of the 1920s. Not only did Allen tell the story of that decade, but he daringly ranged far beyond the conventional political narrative to explore ...
Committee in 1942, Allen asked, “Can anyone in this committee doubt that Communism is as much a racial move as Fascism or Nazism?”134 He asserted the truth of the Protocols, or at least “would not say” that the Jewish religion did not ...
... or in John Ardagh, France in the 1980s (London: Penguin 1982). compare with the price of democratic freedoms and majority rule? 405 A Nation Once Again.
下一個基督王國
Tim Tate, Child Pornography (London: Methuen, 1990), 13. I feel uneasy quoting Tate with approval, since in the early 1990s he emerged as a leading advocate of the reality for a “Satanic ritual abuse” menace in the United Kingdom, ...
American perceptions were also popularized through the work of Tim Tate, a British journalist who was studying the topic of child pornography. In 1987, he began to encounter American allegations about satanic rings, including charges of ...
... “The Social Construction of Drug Scares,” in Patricia A. Adler and Peter Adler, eds., Constructions of Deviance, 2d ed. (Belmont, CA: Wadsworth, 1997), 97–108. 5. Aldous Huxley, The Doors of Perception (London: Penguin, 1959), 52.
Paula Hawkins, Children at Risk (Bethesda, MD: Adler and Adler, 1986); Arlen Specter with Charles Robbins, Passion for Truth (New York: Morrow, 2000). Teenage Prostitution and Child Pornography: Hearings Before the Subcommittee on ...
New York : Adler and Adler . Tannenbaum , Robert , and Philip Rosenberg . 1979. Badge of the Assassin . New York : E. P. Dutton . Tarock , Adam . 1998. The Superpowers ' Involvement in the Iran - Iraq War . Commack , NY : Nova Science ...
41. Natalie Curtis Burlin, “Indians' Part in the Dedication of the New Museum,” Art and Archaeology 7 (Jan. 1918): 30–32. 42. Jeffers, “New Mexican Mountain.” 43. Marsden Hartley, “Red Man Ceremonials; An American Plea for American ...
See Moon, Sun M. Uniform Drinking Age Act, 205 United Nations, 62, 91–92, 110 Urban crisis, 65–68, 167, 252–53 Vance ... 19, 117, 174,202 Weather Underground, 57, 242–43 Wedtech scandal, 274 Weinberger, Caspar, 234,284 Weinstein, Allen, ...
Pete Earley, Prophet of Death (New York: Avon, 1993); Cynthia Stalter Sassé and Peggy Murphy Widder, The Kirtland Massacre (New York: Zebra, 1992). ... (New York: Garland, 1992), 361–93; Thomas Robbins and Susan J. Palmer, Millennium ...
The Great and Holy War offers the first look at how religion created and prolonged the First World War, and the lasting impact it had on Christianity and world religions more extensively in the century that followed.
This new and substantially expanded edition of Philip Jenkins's influential book The Next Christendom tracks the remarkable expansion of Christianity in the global South, in Africa, Asia and Latin America, and the implications of that shift ...
Cults and New Religions in American History Philip Jenkins ... Donnelly published Atlantis: The Antediluvian World, which argued that the lost continent described by Plato had been an advanced civilization of huge accomplishments.
This is an essential introduction for students studying Cold War, twentieth century or Global history.
Using Murder suggests that a problem of this sort can only be understood in the context of its political and rhetorical dimension; that fears of crime and violence are valuable for particular constituencies and interest groups, which put ...