Brenda R. Weber examines how the mediation of Mormonism through film, TV, blogs, YouTube videos, and memoirs functions as a means to understand conversations surrounding gender, sexuality, spirituality, capitalism, justice, and individualism in the United States.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Acknowledgments ix
Past as Prologue: Latter-day Screens and History 1
Introduction. "Well, We Are a Curiosity, Ain't We?": Mediated Mormonism 13
1. Mormonism as Meme and Analytic: Spiritual Neoliberalism, Image Management, and Transmediated Salvation 49
2. The Mormon Glow: The Raced and Gendered Implications of Spectacular Visibility 91
3. The Epistemology of the (Televised, Polygamous) Closet: The Cultural Politics of Mediated Mormonism and the Promises of the American Dream 120
4. Polygamy USA: Visability, Charismatic Evil, and Gender Progressivism 162
5. Gender Trouble in Happy Valley: Choice, Affect, and Mormon Feminist Housewives 201
6. "Pray (and Obey) the Gay Away": Conscience and the Queer Politics of Desire 241
Conclusion. Afterthoughts and Latter Days 276
Epilogue. Mormons on My Mind, or, Everything I Ever Needed to Know about Hegemony I Learned in Mesa, Arizona 284
Notes 309
References 329
Media Archive 345
Index 361