238:, then the Dean of Women at first Kentucky State College and then Tuskegee Institute. In 1949, Morton's health required her to move back to Tennessee to live on her family's farm. She spent the next seven years teaching physically and mentally handicapped children. She innovated camping programs for handicapped children, producing a prizewinning film on these programs. She also used this time to focus on her writing, publishing both
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In 1956, Morton moved to
Madison, New Jersey to teach Christian Education at the Theological School of Drew University. During this time she taught a course on "Women in Church and Society," which is thought to be the first course to address the role of women in this field. This course coincided with
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her shift toward focusing on the status of women within the
Christian church. Both during and after her tenure at Drew University, she spoke widely and sometimes taught courses at other universities. She also spoke at the World Council of Churches Consultation in
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Morton's work has been cited as influential in increasing the establishment of women's centers and courses on the topic of women and religion at religious and secular schools. Morton has been described by
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Drew
University began hosting an annual Nelle K. Morton lecture in her honor. In 1986, the School of Theology at Claremont began hosting lectures in honor of Morton and
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in
Religious Education in 1931. She went on to continue her studies and research at various institutions, including the Graduate Ecumenical Institute in Cligny,
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to
Jonathan Morrell Morton and Mary Katherine O'Dell Morton. She and her sisters, Inez and Lucille, grew up in
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Keller, Catherine (Fall 1988). "Goddess, Ear, and
Metaphor: On the Journey of Nelle Morton".
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After receiving her graduate degree, Morton worked as an assistant at the
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in
Richmond, Virginia, later moving to New York to attend the
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in 1974, and at the World
Federation of Methodist Women in
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From 1945 to 1949, Morton was the
General Secretary of the
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Thompson, Betty A. "Nelle Morton: Journeying Home".
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137:(January 7, 1905 – July 14, 1987) was an American
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310:Journal of Feminist Studies in Religion
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474:People from Kingsport, Tennessee
449:American women religious writers
275:St. Andrews Presbyterian College
232:Fellowship of Southern Churchmen
459:Christian feminist theologians
217:Plymouth Congregational Church
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464:20th-century American writers
394:"Morton Gets Honorary Degree"
186:New York Theological Seminary
113:New York Theological Seminary
202:Institute for Policy Studies
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434:American feminist writers
360:Talbot School of Theology
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479:American women academics
356:"Nelle Katherine Morton"
290:Rosemary Radford Ruether
271:Doctor of Humane Letters
244:The Church We Cannot See
439:Drew University faculty
354:Caldwell, Elizabeth F.
170:Flora MacDonald College
105:Flora MacDonald College
198:L'Institut de Rousseau
135:Nelle Katherine Morton
50:Nelle Katherine Morton
18:Nelle Katharine Morton
380:The Christian Century
240:The Bible and Its Use
83:Claremont, California
429:American theologians
151:The Journey Is Home.
200:in Geneva, and the
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225:Staunton, Virginia
262:Awards and legacy
147:intersectionality
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77:(1987-07-14)
31:Nelle Morton
424:1987 deaths
419:1905 births
194:Switzerland
174:Red Springs
90:Nationality
413:Categories
399:Daily News
296:References
156:Early life
139:theologian
125:Occupation
63:Smalling,
56:1905-01-07
258:in 1976.
166:Kingsport
162:Tennessee
128:Professor
98:Education
65:Tennessee
322:25002081
268:honorary
221:Brooklyn
116:(M.R.E.)
93:American
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256:Dublin
252:Berlin
211:Career
108:(B.A.)
318:JSTOR
242:and
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46:Born
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