A Lifeline During a Crisis of Faith
My first exposure to The Exponent II magazine was in 2003, when I was one of the Summer Sisters (as we called ourselves), a group of LDS women who worked under Claudia Bushman studying...
This post comes to us from Barbara Taylor, former managing editor and president of Exponent II. If someone had asked me if I was a feminist when I moved to the Boston area in...
MargaretOH is the current Editor in Chief of Exponent II Since I was about eight years old, I’ve suffered from headaches. As I child I went to multiple doctors and had many tests to...
We are on the last day of our fundraising campaign and are so close to our goal! A generous donor has agreed to MATCH donations made today, May 22nd, so that Exponent II can...
As a Young Woman, I didn’t know that some might consider being a Mormon feminist to be a contradiction. I grew up with so many models of Mormon feminism. My mom, my dad’s mom,...
[View the story “It’s #myExponent2, it’s your Exponent II” on Storify]
You’ve probably been there—surrounded by people, but completely alone. I’ve often felt that loneliness in my religion. Even though I grew up Mormon, attended church every week, served a mission, I still often felt...
Family / feminism / Journeys / Relationships / women
by Guest Post · Published May 21, 2016 · Last modified May 20, 2016
When I was a child, Exponent II meant pin up parties, left over blue pencils and graph paper scattered throughout our house—the remnants of my mother’s hard work and dedication to the paper. Exponent...
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