Latina Religious Leadership in the Catholic Church in Kansas City

Presented By
Theresa Torres

As part of a yearlong, statewide Missouri Latinos initiative, the Kansas City Public Library is offering an array of special programming. Theresa Torres explores how the Guadalupanas, a religious organization of Mexican-American women, began a grassroots movement in Kansas City, Missouri, ultimately preventing the closing of their church. Religion and social action, though, both empowered and limited these remarkable Latina women. The Guadalupanas saw themselves as agents for change, yet they faced difficulties in understanding and maintaining their limited gendered roles within church and community.

An associate professor of Sociology at the University of Missouri-Kansas City, Theresa Torres is the author of The Paradox of Latina Religious Leadership in the Catholic Church (2014). For her research she drew on the extensive, historic Guadalupe Center materials in the Missouri Valley Special Collections.

Upcoming in this series:
Watch or Listen to Past Events in this Series:
Community Remembrance Project
Sunday, February 6, 2022 3:00pm
Carmaletta Williams, chief executive officer of the Black Archives of Mid-America, discusses her work with the Equal Justice Initiative to memorialize victims of lyn...
14
Mar
Brides on the Santa Fe Trail
3:00pm
21
May
The Spirit of the West Bottoms
Central Library |
2:00pm
21
Sep
The Grand Lady of 12th Street: 125 Years of the Fo...
Central Library |
2:00pm
14
Apr
Janssen Place: A Unique Kansas City Neighborhood
Central Library |
2:00pm

Latina Religious Leadership in the Catholic Church in Kansas City

Date & Location
In Person
Details
Adults