Submitted to Program Units |
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1: Pentecostal–Charismatic Movements Unit |
Abstract for Online Program Book (maximum 150 words)
From the early days of the Pentecostal movement, women played a significant role in establishing the faith as well as spreading the gospel. But in many ways, the movement could be patriarchal, and women have had to make choices in how they conducted their lives. This panel looks at the way women have navigated and continue to navigate these complexities in various regions around the world and at times when they have often been marginalized along racial and ethnic lines as well. It also examines the ways that families have been shaped by their involvement in Pentecostalism.
Papers
- Violence, Nonviolence, and Marginality: Exploring the Non-Violent Leadership of Pentecostal Matriarch Lady Elsie Louise Washington Mason in the Civil Rights Movement
- Silenced and Excluded: Mother Tate, Black Female Bishops, and the Production of Pentecostal History
- Clash of Cultures: Re-emerging of Women Leadership Roles in the Religious Context in the Philippines
Responding
Full Papers Available
No