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| Journal of Communication & Religion | ||
| Volume 23, 2000 | ||
| CONTENTS | ||
| Casey Michael W. | The first female public speakers in America (1630-1840): Searching for Egalitarian Christian Primitivism. | 1-28 |
| Overlooked female exhorters and preachers established a two-hundred-year-old tradition of female oratory before the ninteenth-century secular reformers emerged | ||
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Search CIOS databases for resources containing these metaterms or keywords: public speaking history rhetoric memory religion gender language |
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| Jablonski Carol J. | Dorothy Day's contested legacy: "Humble irony" as a constraint on memory. | 29-49 |
| Dorothy Day's unusual combination of orthodox piety and radical politics complicates the collective memory of her in the Catholic community | ||
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Search CIOS databases for resources containing these metaterms or keywords: memory religion semiotic theory humor metaphor |
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| Schultz Bradley E. | The effects of digital environments on religious television stations. | 50-71 |
| This study sought to investigate the effects of the government mandated transfer from analog to digital broadcasting, as it pertains to religious television stations | ||
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Search CIOS databases for resources containing these metaterms or keywords: methodology politics and government broadcasting and media religion television economics |
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CIOS Support Staff