I felt a great disturbance in the Force, as if a handful of persecution complexes suddenly cried out in terror and were suddenly humiliated.Yeah. So, here's my take on the captions:
Shumway wrote:Preston, my brother, and Annette, married less than an hour earlier, sneak a kiss before their wedding reception. The LDS church strictly forbids premarital sex and many forms of physical contact between the sexes.
How misleading. It would have been much more accurate if he had photographed Preston copping a feel on Annette's breast between the wedding and the reception.
Shumway wrote:My sister Rachel has prepared a nicely sliced and plated vegan burger for her husband. Mormon authorities still prescribe traditional gender roles for their members. May 2006
I can understand the outrage over this. What does a woman preparing a nice meal for a man have to do with traditional gender roles? Besides, the LDS church hasn't encouraged traditional gender roles since its publication of
Daughters in My Kingdom in August 2011. That was a long time ago. Why are people still talking about that?
Shumway wrote:My nephew Jonah, dressed in Sunday attire in the parking lot of an LDS church, leaves his Uncle Preston’s wedding reception. Newlyweds often hold the reception in the gymnasium of LDS churches because it’s free.
Completely misleading. Most of the LDS wards in the Happy Valley area have a stingy "no-wedding-receptions" policy anyways, and those that do allow wedding receptions have an equally stingy "only our ward members" policy, so the couples from the wards that don't allow wedding receptions are absolutely screwed.
See here.
Also, I can't believe Shumway would describe a room that typically contains basketball hoops and lines on the floor as a "gymnasium." The nerve.
Shumway wrote:Rachel, my sister, on the bed as her husband Chris rushes out of the shower and into the closet without his garments. Mormons are commanded to wear garments, which are a sacred underclothing, for life after going through the Endowment Ceremony.
You mean a picture of a naked man with bizarre knee-length tan-lines has been given a caption offering an explanation for said tan lines?
Sinister.
Shumway wrote:On the Sabbath, all "worldly" activities, such as buying things, watching TV, playing video games, or even visiting friends, must cease.
This is the one caption that I find mildly misleading. It's incorrect to suggest that Mormons have a hard and fast rule on this issue when in reality this is just a cultural phenomenon based on the scattered teachings of a few LDS leaders.
BUT here's my own story on the matter:
On my second semester at BYU, I moved into Heritage Halls, the on-campus "apartment-style" dorms. Before the semester started, my five roommates and I exchanged e-mails on which woman was bringing which communal goods. The one who was from Sandy, Utah offered to bring a TV and VCR/DVD player, and we said sure.
When this roommate arrived and set up her TV and VCR/DVD unit, there was a huge sign on it:
"
NO RATED-R MOVIES
NO NON-CHURCH
MOVIES ON SUNDAY!"
That's right. You could watch
Together Forever or a Mormon Tabernacle Choir broadcast on Sunday if you wanted to, but that was it. She didn't want us using her television to facilitate our sinful Sunday movie-watching. Since no one else had brought a television after she had offered to bring hers, we were stuck keeping her rules against our will.
(by the way, please don't think too poorly of my roommate. She was a very good roommate in almost every other respect.)
So yeah, it's incorrect to suggest that this is a dictate of the church or something. But it's just as incorrect to act like nothing like this ever happens.
I'm not much of an art critic, so I have little to say about the photographs. I will say that I didn't appreciate having to look at his brother-in-law's naked ass. I feel like I shouldn't have to look at that naked ass unless someone pays me to do it.
But I've read and re-read those captions and that little essay that accompanied it and I cannot for the life of me see what was worth fussing about. The comments make Mormons look far worse than all of Brian Shumway's captions and photographs combined.