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| Journal of Communication & Religion | ||
| Volume 22(1), 1999 | ||
| CONTENTS | ||
| Bacon Jacqueline. | "God and a Woman": Women abolitionists, biblical authority, and social activism. | 1-39 |
| Although many abolitionist women were devout Christians, traditional antebellum Christianity opposed women's public speaking | ||
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Search CIOS databases for resources containing these metaterms or keywords: public speaking religion gender critical theory rhetoric race and ethnicity history |
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| Baesler E. James. | A model of interpersonal Christian prayer. | 40-64 |
| A model of interpersonal Christain prayer (ICP) was created based on a review and synthesis of traditional and social scientific prayer literatures | ||
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Search CIOS databases for resources containing these metaterms or keywords: interpersonal religion |
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| DeSantis Alan D. | An Amostic prophecy: Fredrick Douglass' "The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro". | 65-92 |
| This article is used to offer an explanation of how Frederick Douglass, in his 1852 "The Meaning of July Fourth for the Negro," broke the social and generic constraints of the day and still produced one of the greatest speeches of the 19th Century | ||
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Search CIOS databases for resources containing these metaterms or keywords: public speaking persuasion religion African American issues and civil rights history |
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CIOS Support Staff