New Guest Blogger: Andrea Radke-Moss

By February 28, 2012

Please join us in welcoming our latest guest blogger: Andrea Radke-Moss.

Andrea G. Radke-Moss is a professor of history at Brigham Young University-Idaho, but currently on a two-year leave of absence to be home with her two later-in-life babies. Her book, Bright Enoch, a history of coeducation at land-grant universities in the 19th century West, was published with the University of Nebraska Press in 2008. Since then, she has published numerous chapters on women in the Great Plains, Mormon women at the Chicago World’s Fair, and women in higher education in the West. She is a contributor to the current Women of Faith series by Deseret Book. She is currently researching elite Mormon women’s and men’ birthday celebrations in the 19th-century, and Mormon women’s experiences with violence in Missouri.

Article filed under Announcements and Events


Comments

  1. No…freaking….way!

    Comment by Chris H. — February 28, 2012 @ 12:53 am

  2. Welcome, Andrea! I do hope one of your posts is on birthday parties – and perhaps chocolate cake.

    Comment by Amanda HK — February 28, 2012 @ 1:30 am

  3. Well, that settles it. JI is now officially the best blog ever.

    Comment by Ardis E. Parshall — February 28, 2012 @ 2:49 am

  4. This sounds awesome.

    Comment by Saskia — February 28, 2012 @ 2:52 am

  5. excellent

    Comment by smb — February 28, 2012 @ 8:19 am

  6. Welcome, Andrea (it feels a bit odd calling you that, rather than Prof. Radke, grin)!

    Comment by David G. — February 28, 2012 @ 9:46 am

  7. David, try Sister Radke-Moss…she loves it. Hehe.

    Comment by Chris H. — February 28, 2012 @ 10:55 am

  8. Ardis is right! JI is killing the rest of us with awesomeness.

    Comment by Chris H. — February 28, 2012 @ 10:57 am

  9. Welcome, Andrea! Thrilled to have you posting here.

    Comment by Christopher — February 28, 2012 @ 12:06 pm


Series

Recent Comments

Steve Fleming on BH Roberts on Plato: “Interesting, Jack. But just to reiterate, I think JS saw the SUPPRESSION of Platonic ideas as creating the loss of truth and not the addition.…”


Jack on BH Roberts on Plato: “Thanks for your insights--you've really got me thinking. I can't get away from the notion that the formation of the Great and Abominable church was an…”


Steve Fleming on BH Roberts on Plato: “In the intro to DC 76 in JS's 1838 history, JS said, "From sundry revelations which had been received, it was apparent that many important…”


Jack on BH Roberts on Plato: “"I’ve argued that God’s corporality isn’t that clear in the NT, so it seems to me that asserting that claims of God’s immateriality happened AFTER…”


Steve Fleming on Study and Faith, 5:: “The burden of proof is on the claim of there BEING Nephites. From a scholarly point of view, the burden of proof is on the…”


Eric on Study and Faith, 5:: “But that's not what I was saying about the nature of evidence of an unknown civilization. I am talking about linguistics, not ruins. …”

Topics


juvenileinstructor.org