Sisällysluettelo:
“…Butcher -- Women in the church : conceptions of Orthodox theologians in early twentieth-century Russia / Nadezhda Beliakova -- Obedient artists and mediators : women icon painters in the Finnish Orthodox Church from the mid-twentieth to the twenty-first century / Katariina Husso -- What has not been assumed has not been redeemed : the forgotten Orthodox theological condonement of women's ordination in the 1996 Orthodox and Old Catholic consultation on gender and the apostolic ministry / Peter-Ben Smit. -- Lived Orthodoxy. -- How to ask embarrasing questions about women's religion : menstruating Mother of God, ritual impurity, and fieldwork among Seto women in Estonia and Russia / Andreas Kalkun -- Enshrining gender : Orthodox women and material culture in the United States / Sarah Riccardi-Swartz -- Tradition, gender, and empowerment : the Birth of Theotokos Society in Helsinki, Finland / Pekka Metso, Nina Maskuline, and Teuvo Laitila -- Crises and gender -- Shaping public Orthodoxy : women's peace activism and the Orthodox churches in the Ukrainian crisis / Heleen Zorgdrager -- On saints, prophets, philanthropists, and anticlericals : Orthodoxy, gender, and the crisisi in Greece / Eleni Sotiriou -- Russian Orthodox icons of Chernobyl as visual narratives about women at the center of nuclear disasters / Elena Romashko…”
Sisällysluettelo:
“…Polygamous and monogamous Mormon women : a comparison / Innovation and accommodation : the legal status of women in territorial Utah, 1850-1896 / Conflict and contributions : women in churches, 1847-1920 / Ethnic women, 1900-1940 / Professionalization of farm women, 1890-1940 / Gainfully employed women, 1896-1950 / From schoolmarm to state superintendent : the changing role of women in education, 1847-2004 / Scholarship, service, and sisterhood : women's clubs and associations, 1877-1977 / Women of letters : a unique literary tradition / Women in the arts : evolving roles and diverse expressions / Women in politics : power in the public sphere / Women's life cycles, 1850-1940…”