Bahai Library Online

List of documents by Richard Hollinger

author name: Richard Hollinger
web link: Richard_Hollinger

8 results

sorted by  
  1. Bahá'í Communities in the West, 1897-1992. Richard Hollinger (1992). Sociological survey of major trends in the American Bahá'í community from the nineteenth century to the present — a broad framework in which the history of local communities can be understood. Articles.
  2. Community Histories. Richard Hollinger, ed. (1992). Essay on the diversity of Western Bahá'í communities, followed by six histories of selected local communities in the United States, Britain, and Canada. Books.
  3. Ethel Rosenberg: The Life and Times of England's Outstanding Pioneering Worker, by Robert Weinberg: Review. Richard Hollinger (1996). Reviews.
  4. Exile from El Salvador: A Conversation with Antonio. Eileen Estes, Richard Hollinger, Steven Scholl (1987). Interview with a former member of the Salvadorean Bahá'í community about his history, and about threats to the Central American refugee community in Los Angeles. Includes report "Human Rights Workers in El Salvador Suppressed," by Steven Hall-Williams. Articles.
  5. Foreword to 'Abdu'l-Baha in America: The Diary of Agnes Parsons. Sandra Lynn Hutchison, Richard Hollinger, ed. (1996). Overview of 'Abdu'l-Bahá's journeys to America and his meetings with Agnes Parsons. Biographies.
  6. Ibrahim George Kheiralla and the Bahá'í Faith in America. Richard Hollinger (1984). A study of the Lebanese Bahá'í who first spread the Faith to the United States but later renounced his allegiance to Abdu'l-Bahá, based on many primary source materials the author unearthed in public and private archives. Articles.
  7. Margaret Danner, the Black Arts Movement, and the Bahá'í Faith. Richard Hollinger (2016 Summer). Short overview of the life of a black Bahá’í poet of some renown in the 1960s and 1970s. Includes one sample poem. Articles.
  8. "Wonderful True Visions": Magic, Mysticism, and Millennialism in the Making of the American Bahá'í Community, 1892-1895. Richard Hollinger (2004). The early growth of the American, and especially the Chicago, communities was more gradual and eclectic than previously thought, and Kheiralla's influence was less crucial. Articles.
 
   
Home divider Site Map divider Series divider Chronology
searchAuthor divider Title divider Date divider Tags
Links divider About divider Contact divider RSS divider New
smaller font
larger font