…Bookcraft, 1980). [20] Todd Compton provides a significant historiographical overview in “The New Mormon Women’s History,” in Excavating Mormon Pasts: The New Historiography of the Last Half Century, edited by…
…70/71 (1986), 164-5. 6. Christopher Lasch, “A Typology of Intellectuals,” Salmagundi No. 70/71 (1986), 32. 7. See Ralph C. Hancock, “Confessions of Joanna or Towards a Mormonism Lite,” Meridian Magazine,…
…died of AIDS is the tagline that seems to sell the book—and this review, too, apparently, as I am writing that first despite my best intentions—but really, this book is…
…resources of the Church History Museum. Their international art competitions from the last fifteen years are available online, so we were able to cull many of our international artists from…
…of non-biblical, late sixteenth and early seventeenth-century language, for example, has captured the attention of researchers. How would such language find its way into the Book of Mormon, particularly if…
…later stages of Egyptian language and history. He remarks that the BOOK OF BREATHINGS is a late (Ptolemaic and Roman periods) and greatly reduced version of the BOOK OF THE…
Crossposted at By Common Consent By Jason K. Re-reading Job: Understanding the Ancient World’s Greatest Poem Michael Austin Greg Kofford Books, 2014 $20.95 Academic approaches to scripture sometimes arouse suspicion…
…discussion come too late. “Toward a Mormon Literary Theory” should be the first essay in the book, not the eleventh. Readers who pick up this book rather than merely clicking…
…Joseph Smith (Salt Lake City: Deseret Book Co., 1968), 190. [9] Ehat and Cook, 5. [10] Margaret and Paul Toscano, Strangers in Paradox (Salt Lake City: Signature Books, 1990), 265–91….
…or “I am a Latter-day Saint” (which comes later), but simply “I am Africa,” each missionary self-indentifying with that continent’s weather, landscape, people, and animals (including “the noble Lion King”)….