Called to Queer  By  cover art

Called to Queer

By: Colette Dalton and Kate Mower
  • Summary

  • Holding space for queer women, genderqueer, and intersex folks who are or were Mormon at any point.

    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Colette Dalton and Kate Mower
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Episodes
  • Nicole LaRue (she/her)
    Feb 20 2023

    In this episode, we interview Nicole LaRue. We talk about her art and graphic design, being in an queer abusive relationship (and the contrast of that with her relationship with her wife now), and dealing with an eating disorder.


    Nicole LaRue was born in Berkeley, California. After earning her BFA from Brigham Young University, her own adventures took her across the world from South Korea to Japan, to the Oregon coast and places even farther. She currently lives and works in Salt Lake City, Utah. Both a graphic designer and illustrator, LaRue is widely known for her iconic work on the Women's March on Washington logo. She is the author, designer and illustrator of a number of books including Girl Almighty and Small & Mighty, interactive activist journals for kids. She has, most recently, collaborated with human rights lawyer, Kate Kelly on a book titled Ordinary Equality, a brilliantly graphic story of the women and queer people of the ERA.


    For episode transcripts and further resources, please visit our website. To monetarily support the podcast, you can donate at our Ko-Fi page.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr and 17 mins
  • nicholas b jacobsen (they/them)
    Feb 13 2023

    In this episode, we interview nicholas b jacobsen. We talk about an interaction with a cop that put them back in the closet for another decade, how they became an activist, and how colonialism, white supremacy, and Mormonism are tied together.


    nicholas b jacobsen is a seventh-generation Utah-Mormon, trans-nonbinary settler raised in Nuwu homelands. As a creative historian, culture critic, & visual artist, their work addresses their personal and ancestral connections to the U.S. & Mormon settler-colonial-imperialist project. Through this, they work to disassimilate from the myths of white-supremacy and settler-innocence central to Mormon & U.S. cultures.  jacobsen completed a Master of Fine Arts degree in Art & Ecology at the University of New Mexico & a Bachelor of Fine Arts in ceramics from Southern Utah University. They’ve has won many awards & have been published, podcasted, exhibited, and collected throughout the U.S. You can see more of their work at nicholasbjacobsen.com, unsettlingmormonism.com and @Unsettling_Mormonism on Instagram.


    For episode transcripts and further resources, please visit our website. To monetarily support the podcast, you can donate at our Ko-Fi page.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

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    1 hr and 24 mins
  • Alice Abrams (she/her)
    Feb 6 2023

    In this episode, we interview Alice Abrams. We talk about realizing she was bi after she was married and had a baby (and the process of telling her husband and coming out publicly), how her art and queerness have intertwined, and getting into printmaking.


    M. Alice Abrams (Pritchett) is an illustrator and printmaker specializing in linoleum block print located in Vancouver, Washington. Her art work reflects her religious convictions and insights, as well as her insights and feelings about parenthood. Her goal is to create simple yet poignant artwork that makes people feel loved, seen, and welcomed in the gospel of Jesus Christ. Alice recently came out as Bi-sexual and Bi-romantic on her Instagram account, and shares some of her experiences with coming out to her community of friends online. When she isn't busy carving or painting, she is trying to keep up with her lively daughters and dog with her husband.


    For episode transcripts and further resources, please visit our website. To monetarily support the podcast, you can donate at our Ko-Fi page.


    Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

    Show more Show less
    1 hr and 25 mins

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