Apr 09, 2008

Death and Mormonism

Mormon_culture_of_salvationI finally dragged myself through to the end of The Mormon Culture of Salvation: Force, Grace and Glory (2000) by Douglas Davies, an English scholar of Mormonism. Odd subtitle, as there was precious little discussion of force, grace, or glory in the book. The author's focus was on Mormonism as a religious system providing an assurance of death transcendence to believers, which didn't turn out as downbeat as one might expect. The last two chapters (weighing Mormonism as a possible world religion) were fairly accessible, but the first six were pretty tough going. An eclectic mix of religious studies and sociology of religion terminology and "models" makes the book feel more like a collection of essays than a book.

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Jan 12, 2008

Gladys Knight and Mormon Music

Suv I'm slowly working my way through Terryl Givens' People of Paradox: A History of Mormon Culture (OUP, 2007). Chapter 13 is on music and dance in the 20th century. There's plenty to work with, from the Choir to the Osmonds to Saturday's Warrior (the first of the Mormon pop musicals). But what really caught my attention was the paragraph on Gladys Knight's Saints Unified Voices ("SUV") choir.

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Oct 13, 2007

On the Road, Part 3

OntheroadThis is the third and final installment reviewing Richard Bushman's On the Road with Joseph Smith: An Author's Diary, covering the main part of the book, including a lengthy section recounting interaction with LDS blogs. I'm going to keep this short, as I rediscovered Daniel Peterson's lengthy discussion of the book in his Editor's Intro to a recent FARMS Review, which covered the same things I noted. I suspect he said it better than I would, so I'll let you read the good stuff there and keep my comments here brief, again with quotes from the book in italics and my comments to follow.

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Oct 10, 2007

On the Road, Part 2

Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling ("RSR") was published and available for sale to the public on September 25, 2005. The first section of On the Road with Joseph Smith is titled "Preparations" and covers July and August of 2005, a period in which Bushman reviewed the RSR galleys from his publisher, spoke with journalists and book reviewers, and fretted more than a little over how the book was going to be received by its two primary audiences, Mormons and non-Mormons. Here are a few quotes (in italics) from this section of the book, with my comments following.

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Oct 09, 2007

On the Road with Joseph Smith

I've been slacking off my book blogging, but it's time to get back to basics. I recently acquired a copy of the paperback edition of Richard L. Bushman's On the Road with Joseph Smith: An Author's Diary (Greg Kofford Books, 2007), and I plan to put up several posts as I read through it. Here are a few quotes (in italics) from the six-page Introduction, along with my comments.

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May 26, 2007

Mormons & Mormonism

Southpark_mormons_2 Just finished Mormons & Mormonism: An Introduction to an American World Religion (U. of Illinois, 2001), a collection of essays and book excerpts edited by Eric Eliason, a BYU English prof. In a world where media misinformation and even comedy shows define truth for a disturbingly large segment of the US population, it's important to have reliable resources at hand. This book seems to be intended as a supplementary text to accompany an undergraduate religious studies course on religion or on Mormonism, with essays by a wide variety of LDS and non-LDS scholars from several fields. [I wonder if the book is used for any courses at BYU?] Surprisingly, the only one of the essays I'd read before was "Is Mormonism Christian?" by Jan Shipps. I'll comment on a few of the essays, although I could easily discuss every one of them (sorry, this is a hobby, not a profession).

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Apr 02, 2007

Mormon Neo-Orthodoxy, Ch. 1-2

As noted in a prior post, here's a short discussion of the first two chapters of Mormon Neo-Orthodoxy by O. Kendall White, Jr. The first chapter, "The Development of Crisis Theologies," gives a short introduction to the sociology of religion and an interesting analysis of how social and cultural crisis seems to lead to certain theological responses. I'll try creating my first-ever HTML table to display that typology graphically. Chapter Two reviews Protestant Neo-Orthodoxy as a prelude to assessing how Mormonism matches up (an exercise undertaken in chapters 3 and 4, which I'll cover in my next post in this series).

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Feb 24, 2007

On the Road With Joseph Smith

Last night at Miller-Eccles, I held in my hand a copy of On the Road With Joseph Smith, the pricey "Year in the Life" diary of Richard Bushman as he toured the country from mid-2005 to mid-2006 giving lectures on Rough Stone Rolling, his celebrated biography of Joseph Smith, Jr. And when I say pricey, I mean it: the limited printing of 100 went for $150 a piece and are reselling at a significant premium in the secondary market. Wow, I haven't paid that much for a book since ... college. Even so, a buck a page. That's enough to make anyone start keeping a journal.

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Jan 31, 2007

The Angel and the Beehive

Just finished The Angel and the Beehive: The Mormon Struggle with Assimilation (U. of Illinois Press, 1994) by Armand Mauss. It is an exercise in the sociology of religion, looking at the experience of the LDS Church in the 20th century and particularly the second half of that century. I can summarize the thesis of the book in one sentence: After spending the first fifty years of the 20th century striving for and largely achieving assimilation with and acceptance by mainstream America, the Church then spent the next fifty years partially de-assimilating and reasserting its unique and conservative religious identity in order to keep itself and its members visibly distinct from mainstream and Evangelical Protestantism. [I didn't say it would be a short sentence.] Mauss terms that de-assimilation process retrenchment.

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Jan 20, 2007

The Mormon Way

Mormonway Just finished my advance copy of The Mormon Way of Doing Business (2007) by Jeff Benedict. It is subtitled "leadership and success through faith and family." The book has received a fair amount of attention: I've seen a write-up on the book in the Deseret News; a report on a panel discussion with the author and several of the CEOs featured in the book; and a long excerpt from the first chapter. [And don't miss the fine review posted at Straight and Narrow, Jettboy's blog.] So I'll keep my comments short and maybe give longer comments on one of the chapters in a later post.

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Oct 09, 2006

The Politics of American Religious Identity

Just finished Kathleen Flake's The Politics of American Religious Identity: The Seating of Senator Reed Smoot, Mormon Apostle (Univ. of North Carolina Press, 2004). The long title pretty much explains the whole book: Reed Smoot, a Mormon Apostle, was elected in 1903 to represent Utah in the US Senate, but a groundswell of opposition from women's groups and Protestant clergy led the Senate to refer the whole matter to its Committee on Privileges and Elections. The Committee then spent four years holding hearings as part of its "investigation" into Smoot, which was, in fact, largely a political attack on the Church as an institution. In the end, it failed, and Smoot took his seat, serving until 1933 and going on to become one of the most powerful and respected members of the Senate. The author uses the book and the Smoot hearings to investigate not the LDS Church but American religion in general during this period. In particular, the book uses the politics of the Smoot hearings to illustrate and highlight the change from 19th-century moral reform movements to 20th-century secular politics dominated by politicians who supported governmental neutrality over Protestant moralizing. God moves in mysterious ways: He used Smoot, TR, and the Republican Party to get the Protestants out of politics and Utah into the Union. Amen and amen.

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Sep 29, 2006

Between the Testaments

Just finished Between the Testaments: From Malachi to Matthew (Deseret, 2002), by S. Kent Brown and Richard Neitzel Holzapfel. I put the book on the front panel at the DMI Bookstore (which you really ought to visit if you haven't). This isn't what you'd call a heavy doctrinal or historical book, but it's quite useful for bridging the disconnect between the end of the Old Testament and the dawn of the New Testament some 500 years later. In an earlier post I noted a couple of interesting items from Section I of the book, which reviewed the history of Judea during this period. Here I'll pick a theme from each of the other three sections, which cover sacred writings; parties or sects that emerged among the Jews in Judea; and doctrinal developments that arose during the period.

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Sep 13, 2006

Mind the Gap

When it comes to history, a 500-year gap leaves a jarring discontinuity in the narrative. But that's what the modern Protestant (and LDS) Bible gives us, with Malachi signing off around 450 BC when Jerusalem and Judea were under the political control of the Persians, then Matthew and his fellow evangelists picking up the story 500 years later when Judea was under the political control of the Romans. And the casual reader might never even know that, in between, the Greeks ran the place for almost 200 years! To help me out a bit with all this, I picked up Between the Testaments: From Malachi to Matthew (Deseret Book, 2002) by S. Kent Brown and Richard Neitzel Holzapfel, a couple of BYU profs. I don't normally spring for correlated titles, but I was wandering through the BYU Bookstore a couple of weeks ago, and with hundreds of LDS books on display I felt like I just had to buy something.

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Jul 06, 2006

Looking Back on the McKay Era

I have posted a couple of discussions of chapters from David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism (chapter 10 on the LDS missionary program and chapter 12 on Communism). This final post will give an overview of some of the remaining chapters and an overall assessment of this excellent biography.

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Jun 10, 2006

First Shot at BYU Studies

Byus_cover1 My first regular issue of BYU Studies arrived this week. Nice semi-glossy paper. It's like Dialogue without the poetry. Oh, and it's correlated. Really; it says so on the inside back cover: "BYU Studies is dedicated to the correlation of revealed and discovered truth and to the conviction that the spiritual and the intellectual can be complementary and fundamentally harmonious avenues of knowledge." I don't care, I'm going to read it anyway. I'll start with short comments here about James B. Allen's review of Prince and Wright's David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism, presently my featured LDS history book (sidebar, top left).

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May 15, 2006

Solemn Covenant

Just finished Solemn Covenant: The Mormon Polygamous Passage (U. of Illinois Press, 1992) by B. Carmon Hardy. Like every story, the story of Mormon polygamy has a beginning, middle, and end. This book gives the definitive account of the end of official polygamy as practiced in the LDS Church, and the end is at least as interesting as the beginning. But for modern Latter-day Saints, it is, in many ways, a painful tale. In fact, most of you are probably better off simply not reading this book. Just stick with the "Wilford Woodruff got a revelation in 1890 that ended the practice of polygamy" story (what I'll call the "Manifesto Myth") and get on with your life. Here are three reasons you probably shouldn't read this book.

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May 06, 2006

The Man Who Would Be King

Strang2 I recently finished an advance copy of "God Has Made Us a Kingdom": James Strang and the Midwest Mormons (Signature, 2006) by Vickie Cleverley Speek, a former journalist. Her book retells the improbable story of Jesse James Strang, a relatively recent convert to Mormonism who put forth a claim to be Joseph Smith's successor following his death in 1844. While it seems odd to modern Mormons, some Mormons of that day took Strang's claim seriously, and he gathered hundreds of scattered post-Nauvoo Mormons to him, first in Wisconsin, then later on Beaver Island in the remote northern waters of Lake Michigan. His death at the hands of an assassin (who was immediately given refuge in a US warship docked at Beaver Island) cut short his "Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints" (commonly known as the Strangites). What are we to make of this strange episode in LDS history?

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Feb 02, 2006

Rolled That Stone

I finally finished it, the mother of all Joseph Smith biographies. There has been more than enough posted on RSR the last several months, so I'll just make a few summary comments rather than attempt a longer review. Rough Stone Rolling will certainly be the authoritative biography of Joseph for many years to come. They ought to make it the Priesthood/RS manual next year. It is a book that anyone who takes Joseph Smith seriously should read. In the following paragraphs, I will note just a few things I really enjoyed about the book.

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Jan 25, 2006

England Calling

England1_1 I just finished Proving Contraries: A Collection of Writings in Honor of Eugene England (Signature, 2005), edited by Robert A. Rees. And "writings" is the right term, as the book covers every genre: there are poems, essays, stories, articles, and even a short dramatic script. This is appropriate, I suppose, to celebrate the BYU prof and writer who was apparently a moving force in pushing hundreds of LDS writers and students to develop their writing talents in diverse directions. England co-founded Dialogue when he was still a graduate student, at Stanford. Later, he also co-founded the Association for Mormon Letters. If he'd done nothing else, that would have been a substantial legacy. For more biographic details, you can look up the Sunstone issue devoted to England's memory. In the balance of the post, I'll talk about a few of the more interesting entries in the book.

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Dec 21, 2005

Adventures of a Church Historian

I just completed Adventures of a Church Historian, Leonard Arrington's professional memoir that focuses on his tenure as LDS Church Historian from 1972 to 1982. He speaks frankly about both the challenges and the accomplishments of the History Division of the LDS Historical Department during the period when he was directly involved with it. The book is highly recommended for anyone with an interest in LDS history, both to get an informed account of the "official" LDS position vis-a-vis the writing of history by trained LDS historians and to get a sense of how much Arrington and his co-workers managed to accomplish.

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Sep 13, 2005

The Mysteries of Godliness

MysteriessoftI finally finished David John Buerger's Mysteries of Godliness (Signature, 2d ed. 2002). Subtitled "A History of Modern Temple Worship," this is simply not the sort of book your average Mormon is inclined to read. I myself put it off for about three years. I have enough problems without some muckracking dissenter adding to my temple list, I thought. Surprisingly, I quite enjoyed the book. So I'll provide a sort of edited PG ("particularly gentle") version of the book, "adapted to the capacity of the weak and the weakest of all saints," and let those of you who want the rest of the story of the LDS temple liturgy go read it on your own. If you can't wait or just don't want to shell out for the entire book, you can read Chapter 3 online for free.

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Aug 17, 2005

Upcoming Books

Flounder The annual Signature catalogue came in the mail today, a classy little booklet with my name and "Dave's Mormon Inquiry Weblog" on the address line — that's a first! Upcoming books are Justin's specialty — he's got 30 posted on his sidebar — so I'll just hit a couple of highlights. Next month's Signature release is The Eyes of a Flounder, a book of poems. Someone should buy a copy for Nate. The author lives in Hobble Creek Canyon, home of my favorite Utah golf course. I shot a 35 on the back nine once (sunk a chip for birdie on the last hole). A book to look for next year is Statements of the First Presidency: A Topical Compendium. There's really no reason every FP statement for the past 50 years shouldn't be posted at LDS.org for members to read and study. Why do we need a Signature book to make these pronouncements accessible to the general membership?

Jul 17, 2005

Mormon Fiction

Just finished Folk of the Fringe, a collection of five Orson Scott Card stories written a number of years ago. They are set in post-nuclear America, specifically a renascent state of Deseret struggling to re-establish civilization in the intermountain West under the umbrella of Mormon solidarity. It's my first foray into what one might call Mormon fiction. This wasn't Mormon soap opera fare of the type one sees on the shelf at Deseret Book; while some of the characters were LDS and there was a Mormon cultural background, these were not LDS-themed plots. But an LDS reader will read a richer story than one not acquainted with things Mormon. And that's what makes the book worth reading, perhaps.

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Jun 30, 2005

Quorum of the Anointed

Anointed
I just finished reading through my advance reading copy ("ARC") of Joseph Smith's Quorum of the Anointed, 1842-1845: A Documentary History (Signature, 2005), edited by Devery S. Anderson and Gary James Bergera. The book doesn't use a standard narrative treatment, but instead presents a chronological arrangement of quotations from all available sources relating statements about the Quorum of the Anointed ("QA"), the select group of about ninety individuals who received the higher LDS ordinances under the direction of Joseph Smith before his death in June 1844. A foreward by Todd Compton and a summary introduction by the editors provide context and a framework to the source material that forms the body of the book. There is also a handy section giving short biographies of all QA members. I'll touch on a few of the highlights.

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Jun 10, 2005

The Prophet Puzzle, Part 2

[See Part 1] Here is my second post on The Prophet Puzzle: Interpretive Essays on Joseph Smith, my current Book of the Month. I will make brief comments on several of the more challenging essays. The "puzzle," quoting from my Part 1, is to come up with "a more integrated, comprehensive portrait of Joseph Smith than the one-sided narratives that then existed." The essays (most of which were previously published in Dialogue) do a fair job of highlighting some of the less appreciated features of Joseph Smith's life and personality that require consideration in such an integrated biography.

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May 12, 2005

The Prophet Puzzle, Part 1

After finishing Arrington's biography of Brigham Young last month, I moved The Prophet Puzzle: Interpretive Essays on Joseph Smith (Signature, 1999) into my Book of the Month slot (upper left). I bought the book a couple of years ago, but with the recent JS conference and Bushman's upcoming biography, now is the time to read it. While many of the essays were published earlier as articles in Dialogue or the Journal of Mormon History, the book as a whole is still useful for laying out many of the issues a modern (i.e., post-Brodie) JS biographer must confront. I'll use my reading of the essays to put together a list of questions I'll bring to Bushman's JS bio when it comes out later this year.

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Mar 29, 2005

Gimme Shelter

Just finished Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place (Pantheon, 1991) by Terry Tempest Williams. No relation to Gunther Gabel Williams, but the same cadence. The narrative revolves around the Great Salt Lake and involves several Mormon scenes, but has as its primary themes the fragility of the various ecosystems that rim the Lake, the struggle of the author's mother as she deals with a cancer diagnosis and treatment, and the challenge of being a spiritual woman in a patriarchal society. I highly recommend the book to anyone who loves nature, who lives within a hundred miles of Great Salt Lake, who is a woman, or who has cancer in the family.

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Mar 24, 2005

Brigham on Science and Theology

I probably wouldn't post comments on this short section of American Moses, but it is such a nice complement to Clark's recent posts on the nature of spiritual reality over at The Bloggernacle Times that it deserves mention. We often attribute this line of thinking to a sermon or two by Joseph Smith in Nauvoo, but we should not ignore the optimistic and "science-friendly" views of Brigham Young expressed over many years in Utah.

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Mar 23, 2005

Brigham in England

I'm about halfway through American Moses, my March 2005 Book o' Month. Much of Brigham Young's early story parallels the path of early LDS history (New York to Ohio and Missouri, then Illinois), so in this comment I'll highlight a less familiar episode from that period, Brigham's mission to England in 1840-41.

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Feb 08, 2005

Mormon Establishment

Four essays toward the middle of God and Country consider the question of whether Utah in the second half of the 20th century presents a case of informal (or de facto) establishment. The four authors are familiar, but the verdict is surprisingly mixed. It's fair to say that Quinn's contribution in Chapter 7 will likely get the most attention, but the other three chapters help balance out Quinn's characteristic overkill and remind the reader that religious political influence may be real but is often only apparent, even in "Mormon Utah."

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Jan 31, 2005

God and Country

I just snared an advance reading copy ("ARC") of God and Country: Politics in Utah (Signature, March 2005), edited by Jeffery Sells, which I added to my February 2005 Book of the Month slot (upper left). The book is a collection of essays by a diverse group of scholars and civic leaders in law, politics, and religion, giving what amounts to the non-LDS perspective on the role of church and state in Utah. As such, it certainly provides some novel views of life in Utah that even career Utahns have probably never considered, such as "Living a Jewish Life in Utah," by a Jewish Rabbi who is also an adjunct faculty member at BYU. It also provides a contemporary example of a locality where a type of informal religious establishment can be examined and observed, nicely complementing the 18th- and 19th-century American examples that are generally used to frame such a discussion.

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Jan 27, 2005

American Moses

I posted Arrington's Brigham Young: American Moses (U of Illinois, 1986) as my February 2005 Book of the Month (see upper left). A nice summary of the book is Arrington's Encyclopedia of Mormonism bibliographical essay on Brigham Young, posted online here. "Colonizer, territorial governor, and President of the Church" is how Arrington describes him in the opening line of the essay. In the early years he was a skilled carpenter and a dedicated monogamous husband to his first wife, doing most of the domestic work for several years after she contracted tuberculosis around 1828 (she passed away in September 1832, shortly after the Youngs joined the LDS Church).

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Jan 24, 2005

The End of Mormon History

Reading the last section of Arrington and Bitton's The Mormon Experience, I was struck by how quickly the epic phase of Mormon history ended in 1890 when active conflict with the US government effectively ended. Their discussion of "The Modern Church" in the last third of the book begins with a chapter on "Creative Adjustment," then three chapters looking at the finances, the institutional structure and growth, and the diverse membership of the Church in the 20th century. The Mormon experience in the 20th century reads a lot more like a standard denominational history than did the colorful and unique 19th-century Mormon experience. Which brings to mind the old Chinese curse, "May you live in interesting times." To be a Mormon in the 19th century was interesting. Things are different now.

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Jan 14, 2005

Mormon Experience, Part 3

The authors devote nearly 240 pages to the first sixty years of LDS history, 1830-1890, then only about 100 pages to the remaining hundred years (including the Epilogue, added for the second edition in 1992). But that's appropriate because in some sense the action in Mormon history ended in 1890. Before 1890 there was city building, migration, revelation, and conflict; after 1890, one has only bureaucratic retrenchment, doctrinal rationalization, and growth. The transition between the two periods is a pivotal moment in LDS history, termed "creative adjustment" by the authors, is covered in the twenty pages of Chapter 13, which I will comment on here.

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Jan 11, 2005

Mormon Experience, Part 2

[See Part 1] Unlike most works of LDS history, which generally follow a narrative approach in telling the Mormon story, The Mormon Experience adopts something of a thematic approach, quite explicitly in the later sections of the book. But even in the earlier sections, readers unfamiliar with the storyline of LDS history in the early period will be adrift at times. The Kirtland to Far West to Nauvoo sequence, for example, is not easy to follow in Mormon Experience, although the Nauvoo period itself is well discussed. But the strength of this approach is that the authors can actually raise and address historical questions that other accounts never really get to.

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Dec 28, 2004

Mormon Experience, Part 1

I just made Arrington and Bitton's The Mormon Experience (U of Illinois, 2d ed., 1992) my Book of the Month, which is now nestled in my sidebar just above the Now Reading list. ME is generally regarded as the premier one-volume LDS history, and it deserves a serious cover-to-cover reading rather than the spotty treatment I gave it several years ago during a bike trip in Southern Utah. Furthermore, reviewing ME is a great review in preparation for the new year's Sunday School curriculum, which covers Church History. This post will look at ME's coverage of Joseph's translating and "the Urim and Thummim."

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Dec 01, 2004

By the Hand of Mormon, Part 1

Terryl Givens' By the Hand of Mormon (Oxford Univ. Press, 2002) is an up-to-date summary of scholarly Book of Mormon commentary and criticism. The book emphasizes the last forty years of scholarship and also provides, almost in passing, a short history of the ever-growing Mormon apologetics industry. That in itself is likely to help some readers place long-running debates in a useful institutional context that might help explain why, for example, a discussion about Signature Books or FARMS is likely to be far more contentious than a discussion about Nephite geography or the Isaiah problem. Givens himself does an admirable job of giving fair summaries and footnote citations to both sides of disputed issues, and he shows some sympathy for the admittedly problematic search for middle ground (see a long discussion at p. 165-84).

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Sep 10, 2004

Quest for Refuge

I've been neglecting book notes and reviews lately--time to get back to basics. I've set up a Mormon Classics list (abbreviated to Mo Classics so the title fits on one line, I'm just picky about that kind of thing) to display the primary Mormon Studies books as I read them or, for those I've read already, as I dig up a copy to review. I'm going to post capsule reviews (like 40 words long) under the thumbnail book cover on the left sidebar. If I have more to say (fairly likely, I suppose) I'll put it in a post. Here's my 31-word review of Marvin Hill's Quest For Refuge (Signature, 1989):

Hill chronicles the failed Mormon quest for a self-governing religious kingdom. Mormon militarism, patriarchal religion, and bloc voting eventually stirred violent opposition that removed Joseph and sent the Mormons into exile.

The book covers "the Joseph period" in Mormon history, highlighting Mormon attempts to secure an increasing measure of self-government for the growing Mormon community. Missouri was a mess, both the first try in Jackson County and the second try in Far West, but Nauvoo thrived for a season, ironically thanks in part to John C. Bennett's successful effort to get the Nauvoo Charter through the Illinois legislature. But the same cycle of opposition and violence soon emerged in Illinois.

Amazingly, Brigham Young repeated the cycle one more time in Utah before senior leaders finally abandoned the quest for political autonomy and joined pluralist America, but that's beyond the coverage of Hill's book. He originally wrote it as his dissertation at Chicago in the sixties, then later updated it into book form with the encouragement of his publisher. I had always thought it dated from the mid-70s--I was rather surprised to see it was published as recently as 1989. This book is Hill's best-known work, a fine memorial for a talented scholar who left the scene before his time.

Jul 26, 2004

Losing a Lost Tribe

USA Today has an interesting article on a forthcoming book, Losing a Lost Tribe: Native Americans, DNA, and the Mormon Church (Signature, 2004). Simon Southerton, a mild-mannered Australian plant geneticist whose interest in LDS issues stems from his earlier membership in the Church, is the author. The review has several comments from FARMS scholars, who show themselves to be talented backpedalers (meekly emphasizing the unofficial status of their publications, reviews, and opinions). For more information, here is the publisher's blurb on the book. [Edited 7/27]

Jul 18, 2004

Mormon Enigma, Part 4

Click for Part 1. Here I'll cover the second half of the book, roughly 1844-79. After Joseph died, life got progressively uglier in Nauvoo (after a brief respite). For Emma it was even worse--not only had she lost a husband, but her financial affairs were inextricably intertwined with Joseph's estate and with the Church. A real mess, especially since Brigham Young seemed to take the approach that most of Joseph's assets should pass to the Church but all his debts should pass to Emma. Her relations with the emerging leadership (Brigham Young and Heber Kimball) were also complicated by the fact that Emma did not want to become an odd sort of polygamous trophy wife to one of the Brethren, the fate of most of Joseph's "other wives."

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Jul 15, 2004

By the Hand of Mormon - Introduction

I posted a new Book of the Month, By the Hand of Mormon: The American Scripture that Launched a New World Religion (Oxford Univ. Press, 2002), by Terryl Givens, a professor of religion and literature. I got the last paperback copy at my local Borders Books last weekend. I plan to post short entries on each chapter--there is plenty in this book to discuss and normal blogging news seems awfully slow lately. Or maybe I'm just getting lazy.

In the Introduction, Givens states his intent to investigate the book "in the context of a larger history of the reception and impact of a scripture that has hitherto received little critical attention" (p. 5). He notes four ways the BoM has been read: (1) as a sacred sign of Joseph's prophetic status; (2) as a factual ancient history of a pre-Columbian civilization colonized by Old World immigrants; (3) as a product of 19th-century cultural influences; and (4) as a new American Bible, either supplementing or mocking the Bible depending on your perspective (p. 6-7). Nice list. Add (5) all of the above and (6) none of the above, and it would make a great blog quiz, wouldn't it?

Jul 09, 2004

Mormon Enigma, Part 3

My Book of the Month has been posted for over two months now, but I'm pushing hard to wind up Mormon Enigma soon. Here are comments on the first half, roughly through 1844. I highly recommend the book--it reveals Emma as a smart, resourceful, tough woman, who always managed to bounce back from what seems like a constant succession of setbacks and difficulties. She was a compassionate woman who was a source of support and an example to the women around her (some of whom, to her chagrin, turned out to be Joseph's plural wives, but that's not the focus of this post). Reading Mormon Enigma, I've come to realize what a key role Emma played in Joseph's overall popularity. You had to like one of them--like Bill and Hillary. Or JFK and Jackie. Kurt and Courtney. Peter Parker and Mary Jane?

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Jun 11, 2004

New Joseph Smith Bio

Just released: Joseph Smith: The Making of a Prophet (Signature, 2004), by Dan Vogel. It appears to look primarily at Joseph Smith's formative years rather than his entire career. If so, it covers the same ground as Bushman's Beginnings of Mormonism. Bushman himself is working on the definitive JS bio, to be released next year, the 200th anniversary of Joseph's birth.

May 20, 2004

Mormon Enigma, Part 2 - Zion's Camp

Over at Joseph's Journal (my other project) the HC selections now find Joseph and those with him in the Zion's Camp group hundreds of miles from Kirtland, Ohio (which they left on May 5, 1834) on their journey towards western Missouri, where they will arrive in mid-June. The whole Zion's Camp episode (a private religious army marching halfway across America!) should have been a wake-up call that the Mormons were more than just another Christian splinter group like hundreds of others in antebellum America. The material I'm reading in Mormon Enigma tonight covers this Zion's Camp period. Here are some interesting highlights.

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May 18, 2004

Mormon Enigma, Part 1 - New York

I'm moving through Mormon Enigma, my Book O' Month (title abbreviated just to keep the title on one line). Here are brief notes on Emma's time in New York and Pennsylvania, covering the period through the end of 1830 (p. 1-36).

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