Other Publications
David J. Endres, ed. Remapping the History of Catholicism in the United States: Essays from the U.S. Catholic Historian.
Catholic University Press, 2017
The essay collection seeks highlights the significance of non-European ethnic and racial groups within the U.S. Catholic Church. It includes my award-winning essay, “Daughters of Charity as Cultural Intermediaries: Women, Religion, and Race in Early Twentieth-Century Los Angeles.” It explores the efforts of the Daughters of Charity to cross cultural boundaries to aid struggling members of the city’s Mexican and Japanese residents at a time when these immigrants experienced intense discrimination in the larger community.
“Bridges to Health: U.S. Daughters of Charity, Seton Institute, and Funding Primary Health Care Activities in Latin America, 1985-2010.”
U.S. Catholic Historian, volume 38, number 4 (Fall 2020): 71-94
“Daughters of Charity as Cultural Intermediaries: Women, Religion, and Race in Early Twentieth-Century Los Angeles.”
U.S. Catholic Historian, volume 31, number 2 (Spring 2013): 51-74
“Women’s Work: The Daughters of Charity Orphans’ Fairs and the Formation of the Los Angeles Community, 1858-1880.”
Southern California Quarterly volume 93, number 4 (Winter 2011-2012): 373-406
“Sisters and Smallpox: The Daughters of Charity as Advocates for the Sick Poor in Nineteenth-century Los Angeles.”
Vincentian Heritage Journal, volume 30, number 2 (2011): 9-26
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