Men's grooming in the Latter-day Saints Church: A qualitative study of norm violation
Authors:
Michael E. Nielsen a;
Daryl White b
| Affiliations: | a Georgia Southern University, Statesboro, GA, USA |
| b Spelman College, Atlanta, GA, USA |
DOI:
10.1080/13674670802087286
Publication Frequency:
8 issues per year
Subjects:
Counseling;
Cross Cultural Psychology;
Cross-Cultural Psychiatry;
Ethics & Legal issues in Mental Health;
Psychiatry;
Psychiatry & Clinical Psychology - Adult;
Religion;
Religion & Psychology;
Religion in Context;
Social Psychology;
Spirituality & Religion - Counseling;
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Abstract
The role of personal grooming as an indicator of commitment to church hierarchy is examined in a study of one congregation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints. Latter-day Saints Church policy urges men to be clean-shaven. In the present study, we interview all men in one ward who have worn beards or mustaches, in order to investigate questions of authority, identity, and conflict that occurred as a result of violating the grooming norm. Interviewees describe an identity conflict, with self-expression conflicting with the desire to demonstrate faithfulness to their church. In some cases, they reconcile the conflict by conforming to the norm; in others, they violate the norm out of a sense of asserting their own identity, but this comes at a cost of distance from their church identity.
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| Keywords: Latter-day Saints; men's grooming; norm violation |
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