“Women and Mormonism is unique in its breadth and scope. …Those interested in seeing a more inclusive approach to women’s and Mormon studies—one that both honors traditional historical work and embraces new disciplines and new voices—will take great interest in this volume. … The essays in this collection reveal Mormon women’s studies to be a rich and broad field with room for many applications.”—BYU Studies Quarterly
“Overall this volume successfully argues for a more nuanced understanding of women’s agency in Mormonism. It is no small feat to bring together so many authors and methods while still developing a coherent volume that is focused and relevant to current discussions. . . . Women and Mormonism would be a great resource for both research and use in a wide variety of courses discussing women’s agency.”—Reading Religion
“In this reasoned and thought-provoking volume, a wide circle of thinkers and tellers express cogent views on women’s choices, boundaries, and consequences. Never again can we ignore the investment women make in their faith. We instead can embrace the personal commitment of women in our global community and learn from their choices.”—Journal of Mormon History
“The strength of the book is the way in which the essays demonstrate that agency exists along a spectrum of options. What makes the book engaging are the biographical and first-person narratives that show women doing, acting, and being in very human ways….Highly recommended.”—Nova Religio
“An important volume and a needed update, offering a glance at the topics currently being grappled with. Holbrook and Bowman have truly helped scholars understand where the field is now situated. They also have encouraged scholars to recognize what is still missing and where we need to be focusing our efforts in order to round out our understanding of Mormon women.”—Mormon Studies Review
“This collection belongs in the library of every scholar of women’s history, religious history, or women’s religious history.”—Association for Mormon Letters
“This work provides a comprehensive contribution to a range of historical and contemporary realities of Mormon women. Issues of race, interracial marriage in Mormonism and the experience of Asian Mormons, of European Mormons, of an African, and of an American Indian give important contributions on these themes. This book will take its place as an essential.”—Rosemary Radford Ruether, author of Goddesses and the Divine Feminine: A Western Religious History
“Without question, this is the strongest collection of essays and articles on the historical place of Mormon women in many years, if not ever. This work will immediately fill a space and perhaps even supplant past anthologies.”—Andrea G. Radke-Moss, author of Bright Epoch: Women and Coeducation in the American West