Ethics and Morals in Visual Representations

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Ethics and Morals in Visual Representations Allegra W. Smith Friday, April 13th, 2012 • Literature review – Little scholarly work on Mormon women and the Internet – Framed by general literature on Mormonism, blogging/faith • Blog review – Examined posts from nearly 50 blogs – Research ongoing • Journaling as an LDS faith practice • Church encouragement in the early 2000s creates “The Bloggernacle” • Faith is foremost: visible on the blog Jenna Cole of That Wife, Stephanie Nielson of The Nie Nie Dialogues • DTR: Define the Relationship – Young LDS encouraged to “date to marry” • Emphasis on early marriage – “It is unwise to always delay marrying so one can reach a vocational or financial or emotional status of independence” – Victor L. Brown, former Bishop • Lack of women who aren’t married or looking to marry • Emphasis on separate roles for men, women – Jenna Cole writes about god-given gender roles: man as breadwinner, woman as nurturer • Growing movement of wives who bring in household income while husbands pursue higher education • “If you deliberately choose to avoid marriage and children… I’m not really sure you got the memo about the purpose of life and [the LDS Church] is probably not the right church for you” – Jenna Cole of That Wife • Women share stories of childrearing, homemaking • Provides opportunity for two-way communication Elaine Hearn of Clothed Much?, Kristine Consador Biggs of Kristine or Polly, Kathryn Bingham of Kitsune-Kun • “On blogs that are not directly religious in nature… some entries are clearly marked by religious practice and influenced by spiritual beliefs” – “The Chronicles of Me: Blogging as a Religious Practice” (Cheong, Halavais and Kwong) • Mormon modesty in apparel, accessories, grooming • Feminine gender performance • “Wearing one’s garments” – Literal: wearing the temple garment under one’s outer clothing – Figurative: adheres to Mormon scriptures and doctrine • A Mormon woman who wears her garments is pure of body and soul • Not wearing the temple garment is denying one’s own Mormonism • Construction and reconstruction of Mormon identities • Providing insight into a uniquely American religious tradition – (that is branching out globally) • Firsthand look at the evolution of a faith tradition – Mormonism had its genesis less than 200 years ago! .
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