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Mormon Dissent in the Age of Fracture

When fifteen hundred progressive Mormons attended Sunstone Symposium in August 1992, they did so in protest. The symposium had become a center point in the growing battle between Latter-day Saint leaders and activists, especially as…

The Enduring Vertigo of the Elect Lady Libbie Grant, The Prophet’s Wife

Of the legacy of Joseph Smith, historian Bernard DeVoto wrote in 1936, “The vision perishes; it is the vertigo that endures.” Reading the novel The Prophet’s Wife by Libbie Grant is to feel that same…

From Private Dreams to Public Damnings George D. Smith, ed., Brigham Young, Colonizer of the American West: Diaries and Office Journals, 1832–1871

Searching For Sally Virginia Kerns, Sally in Three Worlds: An Indian Captive in the House of Brigham Young

Pioneer Mother

Listen to this piece here.  I come from a family of Mormons, although perhaps somewhat unorthodox ones. Somewhere in England and what is today Romania, my father’s ancestors heard of a man named Joseph Smith…

Joseph Smith’s History: It’s Complicated Ronald O. Barney, Joseph Smith: History, Methods, and Memory

Missing and Restoring Meaning

Fifty years ago I was living in Cambridge, Massachusetts in a shotgun apartment just off Mass. Ave. at Central Square: 22 Magazine Street, Apt. 3. Spring 1971 marked the last months of my master of…

Smoot in New Light

The eight essays in this collection describe and interpret the US Senate’s investigation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during the Progressive Era. Nominally an investigative hearing on the election of Utah…

Establishing Zion in the Heat of Battle

On April 13, 2021, President Biden announced that the United States would be withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan, indicating a shift in American foreign policy in the Middle East. Saints at War: The Gulf War,…

“O My Mother”: Mormon Fundamentalist Mothers in Heaven and Women’s Authority

Dialogue 55.1 (Spring 2022): 119–135
As the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints moved away from the plural marriage revelation, a marital system that created the cosmological backdrop for the doctrine of Heavenly Mothers, the status of the divine feminine became increasingly distant from the lived experience of LDS women. Ecclesiastical changes altered women’s place within the cosmos.

Salt Lake City, 1957

Podcast version of this piece. Sunday morning in Salt Lake City, whenfaithful Mormons flock to worshipat neighborhood wards, my father’ssecret psychiatric patients slip insidethe back door of 508 East South Temple,for fifty-five-minute appointments.A nurse impersonator,…

Historic Sites Holy Envy Sara M. Patterson, Pioneers in the Attic: Place and Memory Along the Mormon Trail

When it comes to sacred places, I feel considerable holy envy toward the Latter-day Saints. Their sacred sites stretch across the continent, from Vermont to California. Mormons can visit their founding prophet’s birthplace, the grove…

The Words and Worlds of Smith and Brown Samuel Morris Brown, Joseph Smith’s Translation: The Words and Worlds of Early Mormonism

In 1887 Albert Michelson and Edward Morley performed what was intended to be the crowning accomplishment of physics—an experiment to determine how movement through the luminiferous ether changed the speed of light. What they found…

Unpacking Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary Mormonism Taylor G. Petrey, Tabernacles of Clay: Sexuality and Gender in Modern Mormonism

Inevitably at some point, due to structural white patriarchal privilege and a central and abiding concern with discrete gendered bodies and heteronormative relations, the teachings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will…

Review: On Truth-Telling and Positionalities P. Jane Hafen and Brenden W. Rensink, eds., Essays on American Indian and Mormon History

I struggle with beginnings. I always just want to get to it. However, allow me to take a bit of time to introduce myself before I tell the story of my experience with the collection…

Review: Unerasing Shoshone Testaments of Survival, Faith, and Hope Darren Parry, The Bear River Massacre

Although Darren Parry claims to not begrudge the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he does not hold back when addressing the injustices and wrongs that his people have faced at the expense of…

Review: Brigham Young Wanted Every Thing  From the Indians Will Bagley, ed., The Whites Want Every Thing: Indian-Mormon Relations, 1847–1877

Will Bagley is a historian who has written and edited more than a dozen books on Mormon (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) history and the American West. His best known work is…

Roundtable: Time to Let Go of Columbus

For me, as a Native American member of the Church, I approach the hero worship of Columbus perhaps more critically and apprehensively than the average member would. I was taught that he was a man…

Roundtable: Columbus Day and the “Rest of the Story”

Fall of 2010 was the beginning of my last year as an undergraduate at BYU studying public health. I had just returned from an internship in Washington, DC with the Office of Minority Health (OMH).…

Roundtable: I Am Giving Columbus No More of My Time

In 2017, the First Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued a statement condemning “white supremacist attitudes.” As a member of the Church who also knows the history, erasure, and pain…

Politicking with the Saints: On Reading Benjamin Park’s Kingdom of Nauvoo Benjamin E. Park, Kingdom of Nauvoo: The Rise and Fall of a Religious Empire on the American Frontier

In an era awash in a sea of reboots and re-examinations, one may be forgiven for initially wondering why yet another treatment of Mormon Nauvoo is strictly necessary. The city, after all, has received its…

Matthew L. Harris, ed., Thunder from the Right: Ezra Taft Benson in Mormonism and Politics

The Politics of Mormon History

Mormon Modernity David Walker. Railroading Religion: Mormons, Tourists, and the Corporate Spirit of the West

Railroading Religion is a welcome addition to the influx of timely scholarship published in anticipation of the 150-year anniversary of the Golden Spike ceremony. The tensions between religion, geography, and history provide a thought-provoking backdrop to…

Remembering Jane Manning James Quincy D. Newell. Your Sister in the Gospel: The Life of Jane Manning James, a Nineteenth-Century Black Mormon

In this carefully researched work, Quincy D. Newell produces a powerful narrative of Jane Manning James’s life from limited records. Newell reveals what life was like for someone like James, whom she refers to as…

Modern Mormonism, Gender, and the Tangled Nature of History Gregory A. Prince. Gay Rights and the Mormon Church

Few topics have dominated modern Mormon discourse as much as those related to homosexuality. Especially following the contentious and engrossing debates surrounding Proposition 8—the electoral battle in California in 2008 over the legality of same-sex…

Latter-Day Screens: Mormonism in Popular Culture Brenda R. Weber. Latter-Day Screens: Gender, Sexuality & Mediated Mormonism

Latter-day Screens is a fascinating, compelling, and, at times, frustrating look at a wide range of Mormon-related media. This is largely due to the central conceit of the book—essentially working with Mormonism as a meme and…

History Written in Celluloid Randy Astle. Mormon Cinema: Origins to 1952

In March of 1895, in Paris, Auguste and Louis Lumière screened ten short, single-shot films for an audience of two hundred, and the movies were born. Less than ten months later, after years of petitioning,…

A Commentary on Joseph Smith’s Revision of First Corinthians

Dialogue 53.2 (Summer 2020): 57–106
Although Smith desired to publish the new translation, circumstances were such that publication at that time was not possible.

What Size of City, and What Sort of City, Could (or Should) the City of Zion Be?

Why the Prophet is a Puzzle: The Challenges of Using Psychological Perspectives to Understand the Character and Motivation of Joseph Smith, Jr.

Dialogue 53.2 (Summer 2020): 1–35
This article will explore how one of the most open-ended psychological interpretations of Smith’s prophetic leadership and motivation might contribute to better understanding the trajectory of this extraordinarily talented and conflicted individual whose life has so deeply impacted the religious movement he founded and, increasingly, the larger world.

A 1945 Perspective

“For the Power is In Them”: Leonard Arrington and the Founders of Exponent II

The Other Crime: Abortion and Contraception in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Utah

Dialogue 53.1 (Spring 2020): 33–47
In this essay, I discuss this history, present evidence that Latter-day Saint men sold abortion pills in the late nineteenth century, and argue that it is likely some Latter-day Saint women took them in an attempt to restore menstrual cycles that anemia, pregnancy, or illness had temporarily “stopped.” Women living in the twenty-first century are unable to access these earlier understandings of pregnancy because the way we understand pregnancy has changed as a result of debates over the criminalization of abortion and the development of ultrasound technology.

Worthy of Their Hire? Mormon Leaders’ Relationship with Wealth D. Michael Quinn. The Mormon Hierarchy: Wealth and Corporate Power.

Proving Subcontraries: In memoriam G. Eugene England, 1933–2001

“There Is No Equality”: William E. Berrett, BYU, and Healing the Wounds of Racism in the Latter-day Saint Past and Present

Dialogue 52.3 (Fall 2019): 62–83
De Schweintiz documents how students at BYU still hear racist reasons for the priesthood/temple ban in classes, missions, Gospel Doctrine, sacrament meeting talks and even in books published by the Church.

Feminism, Polygamy, and Murder John Bennion. An Unarmed Woman.

John Bennion’s work is set in the late 1880s and focuses on plural marriage through the lens of a murder mystery.

British Latter Day Saint Conscientious Objectors in World War I

Dialogue 51.4 (Winter 2018): 49–76
What of the Latter Day Saint movement that claimed to prophetically discern the times and seasons of these latter days and also boldly proclaimed that they were the restoration church?

The Restoration of Conscientious Objection

Letter to the Editor

Review: Priesthood Power Jonathan A. Stapley. The Power of Godliness: Mormon Liturgy and Cosmology download

Review: An Essential Conversation Matthew L. Harris and Newell G. Bringhurst, eds. The Mormon Church & Blacks: A Documentary History

The Pioneer Woman, St. George

Martin Luther King Jr. and Mormonism: Dialogue, Race, and Pluralism

Dialogue 51.3 (Fall 2018): 131–153
This essay provides an outline for how to have a more robust intrafaith dialogue about race among members of the LDS church. Using principles from Martin Luther King, Jr. about dialogue on race, Whitaker argues for the need for greater dialogue to overcome the past.

Mormons & Lineage: The Complicated History of Blacks & Patriarchal Blessings, 1830–2018

Dialogue 51.3 (Fall 2018): 83–129
The priesthood revelation of 1978 eased some of the tension when the apostles affirmed that Blacks could now be “adopted into the House of Israel” as full participants in Mormon liturgical rites. But this doctrinal shift did not resolve the vexing question of whether or not Black people derived from the “seed of Cain.”

Looking Back, Looking Forward: “Mormonism’s Negro Doctrine” 45 Years Later

It has been forty-five years since Dialogue published Bush’s essay entitled “Mormonism’s Negro Doctrine: An Historical Overview”2 and forty years since Official Declaration 2 ended the priesthood/temple ban.

Remember Me: Discursive Needlework and the Sewing Sampler of Patty Bartlett Sessions

Thomas Aquinas Meets Joseph Smith: Toward a Mormon Ethics of Natural Law

The Word of Wisdom in Contemporary American Mormonism: Perceptions and Practice

Authority and Priesthood in the LDS Church, Part 2: Ordinances, Quorums, Nonpriesthood Authority, Presiding, Priestesses, and Priesthood Bans

Dialogue 51.1 (Spring 2018): 167–180
In the prequel to this article, I discussed in general contours the dual nature of authority—individual and institutional—and how the modern LDS concept of priesthood differs significantly from the ancient version in that it has become an abstract form of authority that can be “held” (or withheld, as the case might be).

The Darkest Abyss in America

Yearning for Notoriety: Questionable and False Claimants to America’s Worst Emigrant Massacre

A History of Two Stories: Women of Covenant: The Story of Relief Society

Preparation for the Kingdom

Joseph Smith and the Sources of Love

The Quest for Religious Authority and the Rise of Mormonism

The Faith of a Psychologist: A Personal Document

The Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt: Some Literary, Historical, and Critical Reflections

Scholarly Studies of Mormonism in the Twentieth Century

The Church and the Law

Mormonism and American Religion

Brigham Young and the American Economy

Anti-Intellectualism in Mormon History: Thoughts on Anti-Intellectualism: A Response

Anti-Intellectualism in Mormon History

The Life of Brigham Young: A Biography Which Will Not Be Written

Federal Authority Versus Polygamic Theocracy: James B. McKean and the Mormons, 1870-1875

Dialogue 5.3 (Fall 1966): 85–100
During the years of the Utah Territory, outsiders got appointed to the terrority to serve in various positions. For the most part, these Gentiles weren’t sympathetic towards the church, and one of the more famous outsiders is Chief Justice James B. McKean who tried to crack down on plural marriage.

The Metamorphosis of the Kingdom of God: Toward a Reinterpretation of Mormon History

Writing the Mormon Past

Dialogue 1.3 (Fall 1966): 47–62
Understanding Mormon history involves appreciating some of the formidable obstacles which confront throse who seek to write it. There is still sensitivity among Mormons to probing that might bring embarrassment to cherished offical views of Latter-day Saint orgins, martyrs, or heroes. 

The Significance of Joseph Smith’s “First Vision” in Mormon Thought

Dialogue 1.3 (Fall 1966): 29–46
In this early article, Allen shows that the First Vision was not well known during Joseph Smith’s lifetime. It became well known after the Prophet’s death, which is when missionaries started to teach about it for the first time.

Introduction: The Future of Mormonism

Early Mormon Churches in Utah: A Photographic Essay

The Legend of Porter Rockwell

“’I Never Knew a Time When I Did Not Know Joseph Smith”: A Son’s Record Of The Life And Testimony Of Sidney Rigdon

Dialogue 1.4 (Spring 1966): 15–42
Not very long after the death of Sidney Rigdon, the influential preacher and compatriate to Joseph Smith in the first years of the Church, his son, John Wickliffe Rigdon, wrote an apology for his father.

The “Legend” and the “Case” of Joe Hill

Christ Without the Church: The Challenge of Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Strange People in a Strange Land: The Far Southwest, 1846-1912: A Territorial History by Howard Roberts Lamar

A Kingdom to Come: Quest for Empire: The Political Kingdom of God and the Council of Fifty in Mormon History

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: An Interview with Dr. Fischer

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: An Interview with Dr. Fischer

Dialogue 2.4 (Winter 1967)57.
here are eleven documents. In addition, there is a letter of presentation from the family of Joseph Smith. The documents in question are fragments of funerary papyri; that is, fragments of long scrolls containing texts intended for the benefit of the deceased and placed in the dead man’s tomb.

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: An Interview with Dr. Fischer

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: An Interview with Dr. Fischer

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: A Conversation with Professor Atiya

Dialogue 2.4 (Winter 1967)51– 54.
Although not a member of the Church, Dr. Atiya for many years had cherished his Latter-day Saint friends and is well informed about Church beliefs. He is aware of the history of the papyri and their relationship to the Book of Abraham in the Pearl of Great Price and is acquainted with the three facsimiles.

Some Reflections on the Kingdom and the Gathering in Early Mormon History

Dialogue 9.1 (Spring 1976): 34–42
Historical studies embrace the most extensive, intensive, and well-matured of the scholarly endeavors which have the Restoration as their subject. The paucity of critical writings in the various fields of theology and philosophy is by comparison especially striking.

Learning to Lead: The Church Executive ; The Ten Most Wanted Men

On the Mormon Trail: Mormon Trail form Vermont to Utah by Alma P. Burton, The Travelers’ Guide to Historic Mormon America

Storybook Grandmothers: Mary Fielding Smith

The Divinity in Humanity: You Shall Be As Gods by Erich Fromm

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: Phase One

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968)101 – 105
Even a casual reading of the Book of Abraham shows that the story refers not so much to unique historic events as to ritual forms and traditions—all these must be checked. So far we have heard what is wrong or at least suspect about the Book of Abraham, but as yet nobody has cared to report on the other side of the picture. It is for that we are saving our footnotes.

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: The Book of Breathings

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968)98
THE BOOK OF BREATHINGS (FRAGMENT I, THE “SENSEN” TEXT, WITH RESTORATIONS FROM LOUVRE PAPYRUS 3284) translated by Richard A. Parker

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: The Source of the Book of Abraham Identified

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968): 92–97
A description of the alleged Egyptain papyri used by Joseph Smith to translate the Book of Abraham

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: The Source of the Book of Abraham Identified

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: A Tentative Approach to the Book of Abraham

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968):89 – 92
It appears that in time the mystery of the Book of Abraham will be unveiled. Meanwhile, it is significant for the Reorganized Church that undue haste and overzealous faith did not move it in the nineteenth century to canonize this work of Joseph Smith, Jr., primarily on the basis that it was accomplished by Joseph Smith, Jr.

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: The Joseph Smith Papyri: A Preliminary Report

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968):86 – 88
The papyri need to be carefully cleaned and straightened and then rephotographed with care to illuminate the under side somewhat to eliminate all shadows in cracks and breaks, which can frequently look just like writing.

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: A Summary Report

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968):67 – 85
The Joseph Smith Egyptian papyri once consisted of at least six separate documents, possibly eight or more.

The Search for Truth and Meaning in Mormon History

Joseph Smith as a Student of Hebrew

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968): 41–55
Zucker describes the efforts that Joseph Smith went through to study Hebrew. Joseph Smith’s personal behavior was apparently not changed, but in other aspects in later years there is evidence that Joseph Smith was using Hebrew language structure

Mrs. Brodie and Joseph Smith: Exploding the Myth about Joseph Smith, the Mormon Prophet by F.L. Stewart

Dialogue 3.3 (Fall 1968): 142–145
In response to Fawn Brodies’s biography of Joseph Smith, F.L. Stewart published a book called Exploding the Myth About Joseph Smith, the Mormon Prophet.

A Mirror for Mormon’s: The City of the Saints by Richard F. Burton, edited and with an introduction by Fawn M. Brodie

One Man’s Utah: History of Utah by Wayne Stout

Whose Victory? Fantastic Victory by W. Cleo Skousen

A Translation of the Apparent Source of the Book of Abraham

Mormons in the Executive Suite

Art and the Church

Manhattan Faces

Mormons as City Planners

The Challenge of Secularism

Villa Mae

A Time of Transition

A Personal Commitment to Civil Equality

Reflections at Hopkins House

Mormons in the Urban Community

Joseph Smith’s Presidential Platform: The Political Legacy of Joseph Smith

Joseph Smith’s Presidential Platform: Joseph Smith and the Presidency, 1844

The Changing Image of Mormonism

B.H. Roberts as an Historian

Mormons and Psychiatry

Income and Membership Projections for the Church Through the Year 2000

Concern for the Urban Condition

The Intellectual Tradition of the Latter-day Saints

The Joseph Smith Papyri

Toward a History of Ancient America

Dialogue 4.2 (Summer 1971): 65–68
If there is no history of ancient Antarctica, there is a valid reason for it. Stone Age man penetrated every continent except Antarctica, and until mod￾ern times, Antarctica was unexplored

Governor Thomas Ford and the Murderers of Joseph Smith

Dialogue 4.2 (Summer 1969): 41–52
Member and non members have criticized Governor Thomas Ford of Illinois for his inability to save Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum. Huntress was arguing that Governor Ford had a lot of difficulties that he had to deal with at that time.

The Arab-Israeli Conflict: A Mormon Dilemma?

The Reliability of the Early History of Lucy and Joseph Smith

Dialogue 4.2 (Summer 1971): 13–28
Mormon history is a part of this magnificent proliferation of data and research techniques. Its own archives are in the midst of classification by professionally competent standards. There is hope for a new era, in which Mormon and non-Mormon may meet on the common ground of objective fact.

Literature in the History of the Church: The Importance of Involvement

A Commentary of Stephen G. Taggart’s Mormonism’s Negro Policy: Social and Historical Origins

Dialogue 4.4 (Winter 1969): 86–103
Lester E Bush wrote in response to Stephen G Taggart’s book which the author tried to show that the Church came from abololonist ideas because the Church was orginially founded in New York, but when they encountered pro slavery settlers in Missouri and faced the hostiltiy from the settlers early church leaders apparently changed their mind, even though Joseph Smith eventually did a turnabout from what records have shown regarding African Americans.

The Secular Relevance of the Gospel Since Cumorah by Hugh W. Nibley

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: President McKay As a Neighbor

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: On Shaking Hands with David O. McKay

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: The Prophet is Dead

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: Reflections on the Ministry of President David O. McKay

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: “When Spirit Speaks to Spirit”

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: A Man of Love and Personal Concern

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: Tribute to President David O. McKay

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: My Memories of President David O. McKay

Willard Young: The Prophet’s Son at West Point

Spiritual Problems in the Teaching of Modern Literature

Faithful History

Sources of Mormon History in Illinois, 1832-48, and A Bibliographic Note

The Church and the Orient: The Church Encounters Asia by Spencer J. Palmer

Another View of the Mormons: The Mormons: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Kathleen Elgin

Dialogue East: Courage: A Journal of History, Thought, and Action

The Manipulation of History | Can We Manipulate the Past? By Fawn Brodie

Dialogue 5.3 (Fall 1970): 96–99
Marvin S Hill was responding to Fawn Brodie’s lecture at the Hotel Utah in 1970 called “Can We Manipulate the Past?” Her point in giving it was she was claiming that the people in charge only emphasize the points of history that fit their gains. She then compared that to Church Leaders only focusing on Joseph Smith’s early attitudes towards slavery, but then she claimed that Church Leaders didn’t focus on the fact that in the future he changed his mind regarding Slavery and became more against it, kind of like Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson. Marvin S Hill kept mentioning that she overlooked certain aspects.

The Coming of the Manifesto

Dialogue 5.3 (Fall 1970): 11–25
Godfrey describes the steps leading to Wilford Woodruff issuing the First Manifesto.

The Lesson of Coalville

The Last Days of the Coalville Tabernacle

A Comment on Joseph Smith’s Account of His First Vision and the 1820 Revival

Dialogue 6.1 (Spring 1971): 106–107
Ever since people first heard of the First Vision, the events surrounding it has been clouded by controversy. Crawley comments with historical references that help to clarify this controversy.

Joseph Smith, An American Muhammad? An Essay On the Perils of Historical Analogy

Dialogue 6.1 (Spring 1971): 46–58
Since around the time as the martyrdom, Joseph Smith has been compared to Muhammad who was the founder of Islam. Green and Goldrup presents evidence for how Islam and the church are different.

Blessed Damozels: Women in Mormon History

God and Man in History

The Sterling M. McMurring Papers

Modern Biblical Scholarship: The Cambridge History of the Bible, Vol. 1

From Gadfly to Watchdog: The First 100 Years: A History of the Salt Lake Tribune by O.N. Malmquist

A Prophet’s Goodly Grandparents: Joseph Smith’s New England Heritage by Richard Lloyd Anderson

Brodie Revisited: A Reappraisal: No Man Knows My History by Faun Brodie

Mormonism as an Eddy in American Religious History: A Religious History of the American People by Sydney Ahlstrom

James E. Talmage: A Personal History: The Talmage Story: Life of James E. Talmage by John R. Talmage

New Essays on Mormon History: The Restoration Movement: Essays in Mormon History

J. Golden Kimball: Apostle and Folk Hero: The Golden Legacy: A Folk History of J. Golden Kimball

Judah Among the Ephriamites: History of the Jews in Utah and Idaho by Juanita Brooks

Some Reflections on the New Mormon History

Riding Herd: A Conversation with Juanita Brooks

Riding Herd: A Conversation with Juanita Brooks

“No Continuing City””: Reading a Local History: Provo: A Story of People in Motion

A Hint of an Explanation: The Message of the Joseph Smith Papyri: an Egyptian Endowment by Hugh Nibley

Dialogue 9.4 (Winter 1974): 74–75
Review of An Egyptian Endowment by Hugh Nibley, which discusses the papyri that Joseph Smith allegedly used to help translate the Book of Abraham. Hugh Nibley decided to state his case, but allow readers to form their own conclusions after reading it.

A Little-Known Defense of Polygamy from the Mormon Press in 1842

Dialogue 9.4 (Winter 1974): 21–34
Foster points out that in 1842 an unpublished pamphlet was written called “The Peace Maker” that expressed its support for polygamy. It is the first-known defense of polygamy before 1852.

The Law Above the Law: Carthage Conspiracy: The Trial of the Accused Assassins of Joseph Smith

Dialogue 10.1 (1975-1976): 84–86
Review of Carthage Conspiracy: The Trial of the Accused Assassins of Joseph Smith coauthored by Dallin H. Oaks and Marvin S. Hill regarding the trial of Joseph Smith and his brother’s Hyrum deaths. Jensen argues that this book is a mustread for anyone who is interested in ‘Mormon history, philosophy, and the law.’

Photography as History: Through Camera Eyes, Nelson B. Wadsworth

Mormonism and Labor: Deseret’s Sons of Toil, A History of the Worker Movements of Territorial Utah, 1852-1896

Robert Leroy Parker on Family History: Butch Cassidy, My Brother by Lulu Parker Betenson ; In Search of Butch Cassidy

An Enduring History: Utah: A Bicentennial History by Charles S. Petersen

Fate and the Persecutors of Joseph Smith: Transmutations of an American Myth

Dialogue 11.4 (1977): 63-70
In the 1950s there was a book published call Fate of the Persecutors of Joseph Smith, which contains stories that have been part of folklore that have been passed down discussing what happened to the people who helped kill Joseph Smith.

Generalized Hatred: The Women’s Room by Marilyn French

Fishing for Emma: Joseph and Emma Companions by Roy A. Cheville ; Judge Me Dear Reader by Erwin E. Wirkus

Two Venturesome Women: Not By Bread Alone: The journal of Martha Spence Heywood, 1850-1856

The Cost of Living in Kirtland: The Kirtland Economy Revisited: A Market Critique of Sectarian Economics

Faith and History: The Snell Controversy

State-of-the-Art-Mormon-History: The Mormon Experience: A History of the Latter-day Saints

A Priestly Role for a Prophetic Church: The RLDS Church and Black Americans

Dialogue 12.2 (Summer 1979): 37–50
In recent years many RLDS Church members have been proud of the fact that the church has been ordaining blacks into the priesthood since early in its history. Sometimes they have made unfavorable comparisons between RLDS policy and that of their cousins in Utah who denied holy orders to black men and women until last year when half of the restriction was lifted.

Elijah Abel and the Changing Status of Blacks Within Mormonism

Dialogue 12.2 (Summer 1979): 22–36
Elijah Abel, a black man ordained to the priesthood, was restricted in his church participation starting in 1843, even though he was well respected by both members and leaders. Newell G. Bringhurst discusses why the priesthood and temple ban might have occured. One of the reasons was when the pioneers were crossing the plains, a man by the name of William McCary, who had Native American and African American ancestry, caused a lot of grief and trouble for both saints and the leaders of the Church.

Saint Without Priesthood: The Collected Testimonies of Ex-Slave Samuel D. Chambers

Dialogue 12.2 (Summer 1979): 13–21
The editors of Dialogue in 1979 compiled the testimonies of a former slave, Samuel Chambers, who was a member of the church.

Introduction

Utah in One Volume: Utah’s History edited by Richard D. Poll, Thomas G. Alexander, Eugene E. Campbell and David E. Miller

Peripheral Mormondom: The Frenetic Frontier

The Orson Pratt-Brigham Young Controversies: Conflict Within the Quorums, 1853 to 1868

Joseph Smith and Thomas Paine?: Mormon Answer to Skepticism: Why Joseph Smith Wrote the Book of Mormon by Robert N. Hullinger

Mormonism: From Its New York Beginnings

An Hour in the Grove

Fawn McKay Brodie: An Oral History Interview

Local History, Well Done: Corinne: The Gentile Capital of Utah by Brigham D. Madsen

The Writing of Latter-day Saints History: Problems, Accomplishments and Admonitions

Sensational Virtue: Nineteenth-Century Mormon Fiction and American Popular Taste

Joseph Smith and the Structure of Mormon Identity

Dialogue 14.3 (Fall 1981): 89–100
Joseph Smith’s 1838 account of the First Vision has taken priority in structuring Mormon identity, despite the existence of different versions. This article explores why that version is so meaningful to Latter-day Saints, reflecting on the symbolic strucutre of the account.

The Word of Wisdom: From Principle to Requirement

Did the Word of Wisdom Become a Commandment in 1851?

The Word of Wisdom in Early Nineteenth-Century Perspective

The Fading of the Pharaoh’s Curse: The Decline and Fall of the Priesthood Ban Against Blacks

Dialogue 14.3 (Fall 1981): 11–45
Mauss situates the 1978 revelation on the priesthood in modern American historical context. Everything changed for the Church during the Civil Rights Movement when people both inside and outside the Church were harshly critcizing the priesthood ban. When the world was changing, it looked like the Church was still adherring to the past.

An “Inside-Outsider” in Zion

Joseph Smith III’s 1844 Blessing and the Mormons of Utah

Joseph Smith: “The Gift of Seeing”

Dialogue 15.2 (Summer 1982): 48–68
Van Wagoner and Walker focus on the seer stones that Joseph Smith used in the Book of Mormon translation process.

Thoughts on the Mormon Scriptures: An Outsider’s View of the Inspiration of Joseph Smith

An Introduction to Mormon Administrative History

The Millennial Hymns of Parley P. Pratt

A Survey of Current Theses and Dissertations

A Bluestocking in Zion: The Literary Life of Emmeline B. Wells

Forgotten Relief Societies, 1844-67

From Apostle to Apostate: The Personal Struggle of Amasa Mason Lyman

The Seventies in the 1880s: Revelations and Reorganizing

Allegiance and Stewardship: Holy War, Just War, and the Mormon Tradition in the Nuclear Age

“The Fullness of the Priesthood”: The Second Anointing in Latter-day Saint Theology and Practice

Voices from the Dust: Women in Zion: Women’s Voices: An Untold History of the Latter-day Saints, 1830-1900

A Personal Odyssey: My Encounter with Mormon History

Swarming Progeny of the Restoration: Divergent Paths of the Restoration: A History of the Latter Day Saint Movement

Saints You Can Sink Your Teeth Into: Kindred Saints: The Mormon Immigrant Heritage of Alvin and Kathryn Christensen

Notes on Brigham Young’s Aesthetics

Faithful History/Secular Faith

Rx With a Historical Slant: Medicine and the Mormons: An Introduction to the History of Latter-day Saint Health Care

Moving Swiftly Upon the Waters: Saints on the Seas: A Maritime History of Mormon Migration 1830-1890 by Conway B. Sonne

A Physician’s Reflections on Old Testament Medicine

Refracted Visions and Future Worlds: Mormonism and Science Fiction

Emma Smith Through Her Writings

The Emma Smith Lore Reconsidered

Joseph Smith and Process Theology

Book of Mormon Usage in Early LDS Theology

Dialogue 17.3 (Fall 1984): 37–75
As one step in that direction, this article explores Book of Mormon usage in the pre-Utah period (1830—46), and seeks answers to the following questions: Which passages from the Book of Mormon were cited and with what frequency? How were they understood?

Religious Accommodation in the Land of Racial Democracy

Dialogue 17.3 (Fall 1984): 23–34
Brazil, with a high concentration of African heritage, was a difficult place for the Church (because of the Church’s racial policy) to make headway among native members. Due to the high risk of Brazilians potentially having African ancestry, the Church came to the point where they eventually discouraged missionaries in Brazil from baptizing anyone who is known to have African ancestry.

A Shaded View: Suribonnet Sisters: True Stories of Mormon Women and Frontier Life

Bleaker by the Dozen?: Life in Large Families: View of Mormon Women, by H. M. Bahr, S. J. Condie, and K. Goodman

Paul: Early-Day Saint: Understanding Paul by Richard Lloyd Anderson

Emigrant Guides: The Latter-day Saints’ Emigrants’ Guide by W. Clayton, ed. by Stanley B. Kimball

“The Same Organization?”: The First Urban Christians by Wayne A. Meeks

Meet the Author of The Prophet of Palmyra: Thomas Gregg: Early Illinois Journalist and Author by John W. Hallwas

Genealogical Blockbuster: The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy, ed. by Arlene H. Eakle and Johni Cerny

Sister Sense and Hard Facts: Mormon Enigma: Emma Hale Smith by Linda King Newell and Valeen Tippetts Avery

Missionary to the Mind: Dialogues with Myself: Personal Essays on Mormon Experience by Eugene England

Fast and Loose Freemasonry: Mormonism and Freemasonry

Faithful History: The Heavens Resound: A History of the Latter-day Saints in Ohio, 1830-1838 by Milton V. Backman, Jr.

In Silence She Speaks: Not in Vain by Susan Evans McCloud

Exiles for the Principle: LDS Polygamy in Canada

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 108–116
Embry describes the role that polygamy played in the forming of Cardston Canada, both Pre-Manifesto and Post Manifesto.

Mothers and Daughters in Polygamy

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 99–107
An analysis of what the individual wives’ roles are in the 19th century among plural marriages. Embry and Bradley make the argument that the daughters in a polygamous relationship pay attention to how their own mom is doing, which determines whether or not when they are older they enter into a polygamous relationship.

Women’s Response to Plural Marriage

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 84–98
Mehr shares stories of polygamy in late 19th century and early 20th century. He especially focused on LDS women’s opinions of polygamy when they entered into polygamous relationsips.

Mormon Polyandry in Nauvoo

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 67–83
Van Wagoner defines polyandry as having two or more husbands at the same time. He identifies women who ended up marrying members of the Twelve or Joseph Smith while they were were already married to their own husband

Government-Sponsored Prayer in the Classroom

LDS Women and Priesthood: An Expanded Definition of Priesthood: Some Present and Future Consequences

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 35–42
In seeking to predict what might occur in the Church if priesthood were extended to women, it is helpful to focus attention on some of these organizational dynamics.

LDS Women and Priesthood: The Historical Relationship of Mormon Women and Priesthood

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 21–32
While an examination of that history leaves unanswered the question of women’s ordination to the priesthood, the historical overview of LDS women’s relationship to priesthood suggests a more expansive view than many members now hold.

LDS Women and Priesthood: Scriptural Precedents for Priesthood

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 15–20
I have heard many LDS women approach the issue of women and the priesthood by protesting that they do not want to hold the priesthood because they have no interest in passing the sacrament or performing some other ecclesiastical duty. I will venture a guess that many men who have the priesthood do not particularly want to hold it either, and that some of them also have no interest in passing the sacrament. But the reluctance of some men would hardly be a good reason to prevent all men from holding the priesthood.

The Ultimate Stegner Interview: Conversations with Wallace Stegner on Western History and Literature

The Benefits of Partisanship: Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism by Richard L. Bushman

Joseph Smith and the Clash of Sacred Cultures

Dialogue 18.4 (Winter 1984): 65–80
Shortly after the church was organized, one of Joseph Smith’s main priorities during his lifetime was preaching to the Native Americans, who he believed to be the descendants of the Lamanites.

Joseph Smith, Sr., Dreams of His Namesake

In loco parentis — Alive and Well in Provo: Brigham Young University: A House of Faith

The United Order of Joseph Smith’s Times

The Restoration and History: New Testament Christianity

Joseph Smith and the Plurality of Worlds Idea

A Survey of Current Dissertations

Historiography and the New Mormon History: A Historian’s Perspective

Eastward to Eden: The Nauvoo Rescue Missions

Objectivity and History

Leadership and the Ethics of Prophecy

Dialogue 19.4 (Winter 1986): 77–85
The role of leadership within the Mormon community is vastly interrelated, and thus often confused , with management.

Document Dealing: A Dealer’s Response

The Document Diggers and Their Discoveries: A Panel

Martin Harris: Mormonism’s Early Convert

Dale Morgan’s Unfinished Mormon History: Dale Morgan on Early Mormonism: Correspondence and a New History

Polygamy Examined: Mormon Polygamy: A History by Richard Van Wagoner

Determining and Defining “Wife”: The Brigham Young Households

Refugee Converts: One Stake’s Experience

Brave New Bureaucracy

BIG D/little d: The View from the Basement

Balance and Faith: The Latter-day Saints: A Contemporary History of the Church of Jesus Christ by William E. Berrett

“The Truth Is the Most Important Thing””: The New Mormon History According to Mark Hofmann

God’s Hand in Mormon History: The Church in the Twentieth Century: The Impressive Story of the Advancing Kingdom

Who Came in Second?

Why Were Scholars Misled? What Can We Learn From This?

The “New Mormon History” Reassessed in Light of Recent Book on Joseph Smith and Mormon Origins

The Need for a New Mormon Heaven

Dialogue 21.3 (Fall 1988): 73–85
I used to love this description because my Mormon heaven seemed far superior to this standard Christian heaven that Twain’s Satan describes. Sexual intercourse does have a place in Mormon heaven, though not as an end in itself. Heavenly residents are busy with activities. Those righteous individuals who become gods in Mormon heaven will certainly be using their intellects as they create worlds and keep them running, and they will undoubtedly be learning continuously. Mormonism never suggested there would be continual music, nor continual church or Sabbath days in heaven.

Voyage of the Brooklyn

The Trial of the French Mission

Freeways, Parking Lots, and Ice Cream Stands: The Three Nephites in Contemporary Society

Honoring Arrington: New Views of Mormon History: Essays in Honor of Leonard J. Arrington

The Case for the New Mormon History: Thomas G. Alexander and His Critics

History of Historians: Mormons and Their Historians by Davis Bitton and Leonard J. Arrington

History for the People: Utah: A People’s History by Dean May

On the Edge of Solipsism: The Edge of the Reservoir by Larry E. Morris

A Double Dose of Revisionism: The 1838 Mormon War in Missouri

Latter-day Saints, Lawyers, and the Legal Process: Zion in the Courts

Twin Contributions: Establishing Zion: The Mormon Church in the American West, 1847-1869 by Eugene E. Campbell

Mormondom’s Second Greatest King: King of Beaver Island: The Life and Assassination of James Jesse Strang by Roger Van Noord

Living the Principle: Mormon Polygamous Families: Life in the Principle by Jessie L. Embry

Reply to “Forever Tentative”

Forever Tentative

Jews in the Columns of Joseph’s Times and Seasons

Hearkening Unto Other Voices: To Be Learned Is Good If… edited by Robert L. Millet

Passion Poems: How Much for the Earth? by Emma Lou Thayne

New Perspectives on Nineteenth-Century St. George: A Sermon in the Desert: Belief and Behavior in Early St. George, Utah

Mormon Splinter Groups: Recreating Utopia in the Desert: A Sectarian Challenge to Modern Mormonism by Hans A. Baer

“What Has Become of Our Fathers?” Baptism for the Dead at Nauvoo

Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 85–97
Chronicling the history  of baptizing for the dead during the Nauvoo Period, this article introduces the practice from the first baptizers to how it was altered after Joseph Smith’s death.

An Ambivalent Rejection: Baptism for the Dead and the Reorganized Church Experience

Dialogue 23.2 (1990): 61–83

Launius shares how the Reorganized Church has changed their stance on baptisms for the dead.

Fundamentalist Attitudes Toward the Church: The Sermons of Leroy S. Johnson

Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 39–60
Driggs shares what an early fundamentalist leader by the name of Leory S. Johnson taught about the church and polygamy.

The Women of Fundamentalism: Short Creek, 1953

Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 15–38
Bradley describes how even after the Short Creek Raids happened, the women there still believed in plural marriage.

Nothing New Under the Sun: New Religions and the Theological Imagination in America by Mary Farrell Bednarowski

Religious Themes in American Culture: Illusions of Innocence: Protestantism in America, 1630-1875

Plight and Promise: Windows on the Sea and Other Stories by Linda Sillitoe

Kimball’s Diaries: On the Potter’s Wheel: The Diaries of Heber C. Kimball edited by Stanley B. Kimball

Strange Love: The School of Love by Phillis Barber

A Reasonable Approach to History and Faith: History and Faith: Reflections of a Mormon Historian by Richard D. Poll

“A Profound Sense of Community”: Mormon Values in Wallace Stegner’s Recapitulation

The Temple in Zion: A Reorganized Perspective on a Latter Day Saint Institution

Dialogue 24.1 (Spring 1991): 86–98
In preparation for the Independence Temple that was dedicated in 1994, an RLDS member shares ideas about temples in general.

The Development of the Mormon Concept of Grace

“All Alone and None to Cheer Me”: The Soughern States Mission Diary of J. Golden Kimball

Speaking in Tongues in the Restoration Churches

Dialogue 24.1 (Spring 1991): 13–35
However, during the mid-1800s, speaking in tongues was so commonplace in the LDS and RLDS churches that a person who had not spoken  in tongues, or who had not heard others do so, was a rarity.

The Paradox of Paradox: Strangers in Paradox: Explorations in Mormon Theology by Margaret and Paul Toscano

Affidavits Revisited: Joseph Smith’s New York Reputation Reexamined by Rodger I. Anderson

Scripture in the Reorganization: Exegesis, Authority, and the “Prophetic Mantle”

Dale Morgan, Writer’s Project, and Mormon History as a Regional Study

The Eastern Edge: LDS Missionary Work in Hungarian Lands

A Teenager’s Mormon Battalion Journal: The Gold Rush Diary of Azariah Smith edited by David L. Bigler

A New Synthesis: Exiles in a Land of Liberty: Mormons in America, 1830-1846 by Kenneth H. Winn

Mormonism’s First Theologian: The Essential Parley P. Pratt foreword by Peter L. Crawley

Utah’s Original “”Mr. Republican””: Reed Smoot: Apostle in Politics by Milton R. Merrill

A Poetic Legacy: The Owl on the Aerial by Clarice Short

Clawson and the Mormon Experience: The Making of a Mormon Apostle: The Story of Rudger Clawson

Delusion as an Exceedingly Fine Art: Bones by Franklin Fisher

Two Covenant Systems: Promises Made to the Father: Mormon Covenant Organization by Rex Eugene Cooper

A Song Worth Singing: Mormonism and Music: A History by Michael Hicks

Why Ane Wept: A Family History Fragment

The New Zealand Mission During the Great Depression: Reflections of a Former Acting President

A Mormon View of Life

Self-Blame and the Manifesto

Dialogue 24.3 (Fall 1991): 43–57
Before the Manifesto was first read in conference, members and church leaders fully believed in plural marriage as being a commandment from God. Once the Manifesto was read, over time members started wondering if it was because of their own actions that polygamy was no longer a commandment.

The Political Background of the Woodruff Manifesto

Dialogue 24.3 (Fall 1991): 21–39
Lyman discusses the political pressures from the United Government which led to the church issuing the First Manifesto.

“Almost Like Us”: The American Socialization of Australian Converts

My Ghosts

Is There Such a Thing as a “Moral War”?

The Moral Failures of Operation Desert Storm

The Thoughtful Patriot — 1991

The Building of Mormon History in Italy: Le nuove religioni, Le sette cristiane: Dai Testimoni di Geova al Reverendo Moon

“And They Shall Be One Flesh”: Sexuality and Contemporary Mormonism

Comments on the Theological and Philosophical Foundations of Christianity

On Becoming a Universal Church: Some Historical Perspectives

Dialogue 25.1 (Spring 1992): 13–36
A historical analysis of the globalization of the Church. Under President David O McKay, the Church was able to reach out to more people beyond North America and Europe, which led to an increase in membership, temples and missionaries.

Unnatural History: Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place by Terry Tempest Williams

Wilford Woodruff and the Mormon Reformation of 1855-57

The Wake of a Media Crisis: Guilt by Association or Innocence by Proclamation?

A Closer Focus: Challenges in Doing Local History

Seeking the Past: Nobel Quest of Fool’s Errand: Faithful History: Essays on Writing Mormon History edited by George D. Smith

Is There a New Mormon History?: The New Mormon History: Revisionist Essays on the Past edited by D. Michael Quinn

Speaking for Themselves: LDS Ethnic Groups Oral History Project

Dialogue 25.4 (Winter 1992): 99–110
An oral history project on ethnic wards and branches.

Great Basin Kingdom Revisited

Telling It Slant: Aiming for Truth in Contemporary Mormon Literature

How Common the Principle? Women as Plural Wives in 1860

Dialogue 26.2 (Summer 1993): 139–153
A study done to see how many polygamous wives there were at the peak of polygamy in the church.

Each in Her Own Time: Four Zinas

B.H. Roberts’s Autobiography

The B.H. Roberts Papers at the University of Utah

Intellectuals in Mormon History: An Update

Apologetic and Critical Assumptions About Book of Mormon Historicity

Dialogue 26.3 (Summer 1995):163–180
FOR TRADITION-MINDED MEMBERS of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter￾day Saints the Book of Mormon’s historicity is a given: Book of Mormon events actually occurred and its ancient participants existed in ancient history

Watching

You Are Not Alone: A Plea for Understanding the Homosexual Condition

Dialogue 26.3 (Fall 1993): 119–140
In fall 1993, TJ O’Brian wrote, “You are Not Alone: A Please for Understanding the Homosexual Condition.” O’Brian was a gay man and this esay addresses how church members should treat LGBT members. He points to Jan Stout’s article among other influential pieces that were beginning to soften LDS attitudes and change practices in the early 90s. But he also notes several examples of terrible things that LDS members were still saying and doing, not including an imfamous homophobic rant from Orson Scott Card in Sunstone magazine in 1990.

Hannah Grover Hegsted and Post-Manifesto Plural Marriage

The Ordeal of Lowry Nelson and the Mis-spoken Word

B.H. Roberts’s Studies of the Book of Mormon

Remembering B.H. Roberts

Does Paying Tithing Make You a Voting Shareholder? BYU’s Worldwide Board of Trustees

Free Expression: The LDS Church and Brigham Young University

Patriarchal Blessings and the Routinization of Charisma

Telling the Tales and Telling the Truth: Writing the History of Widtsoe

The Mormon Struggle with Assimilation and Identity: Trends and Developments Since Midcentury

The “New Social History” and the “New Mormon History”: Reflections on Recent Trends

Dialogue 27.1 (Spring 1994): 109–123
My own analysis of the state of Mormon history suggests that the field, while other factors have also been at work, suffers from some of the exclusiveness and intellectual imperialism that were nurtured during the glory days of the “New Mormon History ” in the 1970s.

Intellect and Faith: The Controversy Over Revisionist Mormon History

Personality and Motivation in Utah Historiography

Nauvoo Roots of Mormon Polygamy, 1841-46: A Preliminary Demographic Report

Dialogue 27.1(Spring 1994): 1–72
Smith discusses the importance of plural marriage in Nauvoo to church history. He shows that after Joseph Smith passed away, Nauvoo polygamy numbers rose.

Memory and Familiarity: Voices from the Bottom of the Bowl: A Folk History of Teton Valley, Idaho, from 1823-1952

From Temple to Anti-Mormon: The Ambivalent Odyssey of Increase Van Dusen

Toward an Introduction to a Psychobiography of Joseph Smith

One Face of the Hero: In Search of the Mythological Joseph Smith

Dialogue 27.3 (Fall 1994): 233–247
Snow puts Joseph Smith squarely within Joseph Campbell’s famous work The Hero with a Thousand Faces, which is also known as the heroes journey.

The Locations of Joseph Smith’s Early Treasure Quests

Dialogue 27.3 (Fall 1994): 197–231

Vogel uses firsthand accounts of people’s reactions to Joseph Smith’s treasure digging.

Joseph Smith and Kabbalah: The Occult Connection

“Critical” Book of Mormon Scholarship: New Approaches to the Book of Mormon

Welfare as Warfare: The Mormons’ War on Poverty: A History of LDS Welfare, 1830-1990 by Garth L. Mangum and Bruce D. Blumell

“My Father’s Business””: Thomas Taylor and Mormon Frontier Economic Enterprise

A Granddaughter Remembers

The Noon of Life: Mid-Life Transition in the Married LDS Priesthood Holder

“Come Ye Disconsolate”: Is There a Mercy Seat in Mormon Theology and Practice?

The Law That Brings Life

Wallace Stegner: The Unwritten Letter

The Education of a BYU Professor

Sterling Moss McMurrin: A Philosopher in Action

“The Strange Mixture of Emotion and Intellect”: A Social History of Dale L. Morgan 1933-42

Mormon Static: Differing Visions: Dissenters in Mormon History edited by Roger D. Launius and Linda Thatcher

New Paradigms for Understanding Mormonism and Mormon History

Scripture, History, and Faith: A Round Table Discussion

How the History Is Told: My Best for the Kingdom: History and Autobiography of John Lowe Butler, A Mormon Frontiersman

Editing William Clayton and the Politics of Mormon History

Reflections on LDS Disbelief in the Book of Mormon as History

Dialogue 30.3 (Fall 1999):90–103
To average LDS church members in 1909, Roberts’s New Witnesses for God substantiated their beliefs and further embellished his stature for them as a historian and defender of the Book of Mormon. But only thirteen years later Roberts was to change his mind and that dramatically.

History

Quilts as Women’s History: Quilts and Women of the Mormon Migrations: Treasures of Transition

More Than Just a Battle for the Ballot: Battle for the Ballot: Essays on Woman Suffrage in Utah, 1870-1896

New York City Rain

Madeline McQuown, Dale Morgan, and the Great Unfinished Brigham Young Biography

Similar yet Different: How Wide the Divide? by Craig L. Blomberg and Stephen E. Robinson

Issues of Individual Freedoms: Friendly Fire: The ACLU in Utah by Linda Sillitoe

A Part of History Overlooked: Missing Stories: An Oral History of Ethnic and Minority Groups in Utah

Reflections on Mormon History: Zion and the Anti-Legal Tradition

Leonard J. Arrington: Reflections on a Humble Walk

Mormon Psychohistory: Psychological Insights into the Latter-day Saint Past, Present, and Future

A History of Dialogue, Part One: The Early Years, 1965-1971

Mission Complexities in Asia: From the East: The History of the Latter-day Saints in Asia, 1851-1996 by R. Lanier Britsch

Plural Marriage, Singular Lives: In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith by Todd Compton

A Welcome Arrival, A Promising Standard: The Pioneer Camp of the Saints

Making the Mormon Trek Come Alive: We’ll Find the Place: The Mormon Exodus, 1846-1848 by Richard E. Bennett

Mormonism and the Radical Religious Movement in Early Colonial New England

The Discovery of Native “Mormon” Communities in Russia

Busing to Kolob: Leaving the Fold: Candid Conversations with Inactive Mormons by James W. Ure

Good Book about the Good Book: An American Bible: A History of the Good Book in the United States, 1777-1880

One Well-Wrought Side of the Story: Sagwitch: Shoshone Chieftain, Mormon Elder, 1822-1887 by Scott R. Christensen

Missionary Roots of Change: What E’er Thou Art, Act Well Thy Part: The Missionary Diaries of David O McKay

The Life of a Controversial Biographer: Fawn McKay Brodie: A Biographer’s Life by Newell G. Bringhurst

Being Joseph Smith: The Sword of Laban: Joseph Smith, Jr., and the Dissociated Mind

A History of Dialogue, Part Two: Struggle Toward Maturity, 1971-1982

Protocols of the (Other) Elders of Zion: The History of the Saints, 3d edition, by John C. Bennett, ed. Andrew F. Smith

Finitism and the Problem of Evil

Mormonism and the Idea of Progress

Mormon Membership Trends in Europe Among People of Color: Present and Future Assessment

Preaching the Gospel of Church and Sex: Mormon Women’s Fiction in the Young Woman’s Journal, 1889-1910

Edward Tullidge and the Women of Mormondom

History of the Church — Part One

David O. McKay and the “Twin Sisters” Free Agency and Tolerance

The Search for Truth and Meaning in Mormon History

Mormonism’s Worldwide Aspirations and its Changing Conceptions of Race and Lineage

Root and Branch: An Abstract of the Structuralist Analysis of the Allegoryof the Olive Tree

History, Memory and Imagination in Virginia Eggertsen Sorensen’s Kingdom Come

An Other Mormon History: Hispanics in the Mormon Zion, 1912-1999 by Jorge Iber

A History of Dialogue, Part Three: The Utah Experience, 1982-1989

Lucy’s Own Voice: Lucy’s Book: A Critical Edition of Lucy Mack Smith’s Family Memoir

Book of Mormon Stories: Digging in Cumorah: Reclaiming Book of Mormon Narratives

Friendly History: Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, A People of Promise, by Glen M. Leonard

Critique of a Limited Geography for Book of Mormon Events

Dialogue 35.3 (Fall 2003):127–168
DURING THE PAST FEW DECADES, a number of LDS scholars have developed various “limited geography” models of where the events of the Book of Mormon occurred. These models contrast with the traditional western hemisphere model, which is still the most familiar to Book of Mormon readers.

Form Criticism of Joseph Smith’s 1823 Vision of the Angel Moroni

A Uniform and Common Recollection: Joseph Smith’s Legacy, Polygamy, and the Creation of Mormon Public Memory

Joseph Smith, the Book of Mormon, and the American Renaissance

Dialogue 35.3 (Fall 2003):9a–128
I am a literary critic who has spent a professional lifetime reading, teaching, and writing about literary texts. Much of my interest in and approach to the Book of Mormon lies with the text—though not just as a field for scholarly exploration.

Prophecy and Palimpsest

The Earliest Eternal Sealing for Civilly Married Couples Living and Dead

Martin Harris: The Kirtland Years, 1831-1870

A Patchwork Biography: Mormon Healer and Folk Poet: Mary Susannah Fowler’s Life of “Unselfish Usefulness”

Studies in Mormon History, 1830-1897

Prostitution, Polygamy and Power: Salt Lake City, 1847-1918, by Jeffrey Nichols

Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows, by Will Bagley

“Not Invite but Welcome”: The History and Impact of Church Policy on Sister Missionaries

All Abraham’s Children: Changing Mormon Conceptions of Race and Lineage, by Armand L. Mauss

Joseph Smith, by Robert V. Remini

A New Look at Old Sites on Mountain Meadows: Historical Topography, by Morris A. Shirts and Frances Anne Smeath

Power and Powerlessness: A Personal Perspective

The LDS Church and Community of Christ: Clearer Differences, Closer Friends

Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2003): 177–192
In this paper I will briefly discuss what I see as the six major differences between the two churches during the first century of their existence, and then I will look at eight new differences that have emerged over the past forty years or so. I make no claim that either is a complete list.

On Being Adopted: Julia Murdock Smith

Sidney Rigdon’s 1820 Ministry: Preparing the Way for Mormonism in Ohio

The Search for the Seed of Lehi: How Defining Alternative Models Helps in the Interpretation of Genetic Data

The Search for the Seed of Lehi: How Defining Alternative Models Helps in the Interpretation of Genetic Data

The Search for the Seed of Lehi: How Defining Alternative Models Helps in the Interpretation of Genetic Data

Simply Implausible: DNA and a Mesoamerican Setting for the Book of Mormon

Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2004):129–167
Instead of lending support to an Israelite origin as posited by Mormon scripture, genetic data have confirmed already existing archaeological, cultural, linguistic, and biological data, pointing to migrations from Asia as “the primary source of American In￾dian origins

A Biographer’s Burden: Evaluating Robert Remini’s Joseph Smith and Will Bagley’s Brigham Young

Joseph Smith in the Book of Mormon

Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2004):109–128
DID JOSEPH SMITH WRITE the Book of Mormon? To this over-familiar question the orthodox Latter-day Saint answer is a resounding “No” because the official belief is that a series of men with quasi-biblical names wrote the book over many centuries.

“There Really is a God and He Dwells in the Temporal Parietal Lobe of Joseph Smith’s Brain”

Scrying for the Lord: Magic, Mysticism, and the Origins of the Book of Mormon

Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2004):109–128
JOSEPH SMITH GREW UP in a time and place where folk magic was an accepted part of the landscape. Before he was a prophet, he was a diviner, or more specif￾ically, a scryer who used his peepstone to discover the location of buried trea￾sure.

From Captain Kidd’s Treasure Ghost to the Angel Moroni: Changing Dramatis Personae in Early Mormonism

The Prophet’s Fall: A Note in Response to Lawrence Foster’s “The Psychology of Prophetic Charisma”

The Psychology of Prophetic Charisma

Wicks, Modems, and the Winds of War

A Tribute for Service Well Rendered

The Freiberg Temple: An Unexpected Legacy of a Communist State and a Faithful People

On April 23, 1983, a groundbreaking ceremony for the only temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints built behind the Iron Curtain was held in the city of Freiberg, in the German…

The Red Peril, the Candy Maker, and the Apostle: David O. McKay’s Confrontation with Communism

Living and Dying with Fallout

Utah Historians: Utah Historians and the Reconstruction of Western History by Gary Topping

Relief Society’s Golden Years: The Magazine

“Changing times Bring Changing Conditions”: Relief Society 1960 to the Present

What Does God Write in His Franklin Planner? The Paradoxes of Providence, Prophecy, and Petitionary Prayer

Mormons and the Omnis: The Dangers of Theological Speculation

Imprisonment, Defiance, and Division: The History of Mormon Fundamentalism in the 1940s and 1950s

Saving the Germans from Themselves?: In Search of the Supernal: Pre-Existence, Eternal Marriage, and Apotheosis in German Literary, Operatic, and Cinematic Texts by Alan Keele

Triptych-History of the Church

Women in a Time Warp: Discoveries: Two Centuries of Poems by Mormon Women, Edited by Sheree Maxwell Bench and Susan Elizabeth Howe

The Open Canon and Innovation: Conflict in the Quorum: Orson Pratt, Brigham Young, Joseph Smith by Gary James Bergera

Belief, Respect, and an Elbow to the Ribs: Believing History: Latter-day Saint Essayism by Richard Lyman Bushman

“He Was ‘Game'”: Joseph Smith: The Making of a Prophet by Dan Vogel

The First Piece in the Puzzle: Walking in the Sand: A History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Ghana by Emmanuel Abu Kissi

The Weight of Priesthood

The Remnant Church: An RLDS Schismatic Group Finds a Prophet of Joseph’s Seed

Dialogue 38.3 (Fall 2005): 26–54
When the 1984 conference approved Section 156 , which also indicated that the soon-to-be-built temple in Independence would be dedicated to the pursuit of peace, it became clear that the largest “schism”—separation from the unity of the Church—in the history of the RLDS Church was in the making.

Identifying the Earliest Mormon Polygamists, 1841-1844

Dialogue 38.3 (Spring 2004): 1–74
Bergera uses evidence from plural wives to show who some of the first polygamists were in the church.

Tending the Desert: John A. Widtsoe: A Biography by Alan K. Parish

The Un-Hagiography: David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism by Gregory A. Prince and Wm. Robert Wright

A Scholarly Tribute to Leonard Arrington: The Collected Leonard J. Arrington Mormon History Lectures, Special Collections and Archives – Utah State University Libraries

A Trader and His Friends: Along Navajo Trails: Recollections of a Trader by Will Evans

A National Conspiracy?: Junius & Joseph: presidential Politics and the Assassination of the First Mormon Prophet by Robert S. Wicks and Fred R. Foister

A Forty-Year View: Dialogue and the Sober Lessons of History

The Death and Resurrection of the RLDS Zion: A Case Study in “Failed Prophecy” 1930-70

On Resurrection Sunday, April 1930, Bishop J. A. Koehler of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints attended a priesthood prayer meeting at the Stone Church RLDS congregation in Independence, Missouri.

A Novel with a Lot of Way-Out-There Ideas : D. Michael Martindale, Brother Brigham

Balancing Faith and Honesty : Segullah: Writings by Latter-day Saint Women

A Must-Read on Gender Politics : Martha Sonntag Bradley, Pedestals, Podiums: Utah Women, Religious Authority, and Equal Rights

Building “as Great a Temple as Ever Solomon Did” : Matthew McBrid A House for the Most High: The Story of the Original Nauvoo Temple

The Kind of Woman Future Historians Will Study : Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History

Innocent Hooligan : Douglas Thayer, Hooligan: A Morman Boyhood

Good Stories Told Well : A Survey of Mainstream Children’s Books by LDS Authors

Polygamy, Mormonism, and Me

Dialogue 41.2 (Summer 2009): 85–101
Hardy describes the long, difficult process of researching polygamy during a time that the church wasn’t open about polygamy.

“A New Future Requires a New Past”

My Madness

The Scholar as Celebrant : Terryl L. Givens, People of Paradox: A History of Mormon Culture

A History of Dialogue, Part Four: A Tale in Two Cities, 1987-92

Tribute to Levi S. Peterson

A Most Amazing Gift

Revelations from a Silent Angel

Not Your Parents’ Mormonism

The Remembering and Forgetting of Utah County’s Landmarks

Dixie Heart of Darkness

Mountain Meadows: Not Yet Gone

A Missive on Mountain Meadows

Roundtable on Massacre at Mountain Meadows

Time Tabled by Mormon History

The Beginnings of Latter-day Plurality Nauvoo Polygamy: “…but we called it celestial marriage.” by George D. Smith

Nauvoo Polygamy: The Latest Word Nauvoo Polygamy: “…but we called it celestial marriage.” by George D. Smith

Complete History of the Church

A Small History of Joseph Smith; Biography of Eugene England

Mordred Had a Good Point Gary Topping, Leonard J. Arrington: A Historian’s Life

Prophet, Seer, Revelator, American Icon Reid L. Neilson and Terryl L. Givens, eds., Joseph Smith Jr.: Reappraisals after Two Centuries

Formulas and Facts: A Response to John Gee

Dialogue 45.3 (Fall 2012): 1–10
In Winter 2010, Chris Smith and I published an article in Dialogue demonstrating that no more than ~56 cm of papyrus can be missing from the interior of the scroll of Hôr—the papyrus Joseph Smith identified as the Book of Abraham. John Gee has responded by claiming that our method is “anything but accurate” and that it “glaringly underestimates the length of the scroll.” He states that “Two different formulas have been published for estimating the original length of a scroll,” then attempts to show that “Hoffmann’s formula approximates the actual length of the papyrus,” whereas “Cook and Smith’s formula predicts a highly inaccurate length.” The fact is, the two formulas are completely equivalent. They are both exact expressions of an Archimedean spiral and they yield precisely the same results, if correctly applied.

Mormon Pulp with a Reading Group Guide David Ebershoff. The 19th Wife: A Novel

Twilight and Dawn: Turn-of-the-Century Mormonism Lu Ann Faylor Snyder and Phillip A. Snyder, eds. Post-Manifesto Polygamy: The 1899–1904 Correspondence of Helen, Owen, and Avery Woodruff

Response to Post-Manifesto Polygamy: The 1899–1904 Correspondence of Helen, Owen, and Avery Woodruff that contains letter correspondence between Apostle Owen Woodruff and his wives after Woodruff’s father issued the Manifesto.

Loving Truthfully Benedict XVI. Caritas in Veritate

Legacy of a Lesser-Known Apostle Edward Leo Lyman. Amasa Mason Lyman, Mormon Apostle and Apostate: A Study in Dedication

Mormon Women in the History of Second-Wave Feminism

Dialogue 43.2 (Fall 2010): 45–63
Reading these books in relation to my own life taught me something I should already have known. Mormon women weren’t passive recipients of the new feminism. We helped to create it.

In Lieu of History: Mormon Monuments and the Shaping of Memory

Finding the Presence in Mormon History: An Interview with Susanna Morrill, Richard Lyman Bushman,and Robert Orsi

Reid L. Neilson, Early Mormon Missionary Activities in Japan, 1901–1924

Patrick Q. Mason, The Mormon Menace: Violence and Anti-Mormonism in the Postbellum South

The Persistence of Mormon Plural Marriage

Review: Edward Leo Lyman, Candid Insights of a Mormon Apostle: The Diaries of Abraham H. Cannon, 1889–1895

Review: The Truth Will Set You Free Errol Morris, Tabloid

“There Is Always a Struggle”: An Interview with Chieko N. Okazaki

The Richard D. Poll and J. Kenneth Davies Cases: Politics and Religion at BYU during the Wilkinson Years

Mapping Manifest Destiny: Lucile Cannon Bennion (1891–1966)

Home and Adventure: An LDS Contribution to the Virtues and Vices Tradition

Dear Diary: Joseph F. Smith’s Mission Journals Nathaniel R. Ricks, ed. “My Candid Opinion”: The Sandwich Island Diaries of Joseph F. Smith, 1856–1857

Errand Out of the Wilderness Matthew Bowman. The Mormon People: The Making of an American Faith

Making Visible the Hand of Ritual: Devery S. Anderson and Gary James Bergera, eds., Joseph Smith’s Quorum of the Anointed, 1842–1845: A Documentary History; Devery S. Anderson and Gary James Bergera, eds., The Nauvoo Endowment Companies, 1845–1846: A Docu

Mormon Authoritarianism and American Pluralism

Review: Terryl L. Givens, Matthew J. Grow Parley P. Pratt: The Apostle Paul of Mormonism

Mormon History Association Conference: Comment on “Conversion in 19th Century Mormonism: Identities and Associations in the Atlantic World”

Mormon History Association Conference: The Theology of a Career Convert: Edward Tullidge’s Evolving Identities

Mormon History Association Conference: To Forsake Thy Father and Mother: Mary Fielding Smith and the Familial Politics of Conversion

UVU Mormon Studies Conference: Mormon Blogs, Mormon Studies, and the Mormon Mind

Conference Report: Editor’s Introduction

Review: Hugh J. Cannon. To the Peripheries of Mormondom. Edited by Reid Neilson

Review: Kim Östman. The Introduction of Mormonism to Finnish Society, 1840–1900

Reviews: Dean C. Jessee, Mark Ashurst-McGee, and Richard L. Jensen, eds. Journals, Volume 1: 1832–1839Dean C. Jessee, Mark Ashurst-McGee, and Richard L. Jensen, eds. Journals, Volume 2: December 1841–April 1843

“And Now It Is the Mormons”: The Magazine Crusade against the Mormon Church, 1910–1911

Our Bickering Founding Fathers and Their Messy, Flawed, Divinely Inspired Constitution

Review: Reid L. Neilson, ed. In the Whirlpool: The Pre-Manifesto Letters of President Wilford Woodruff to the William Atkin Family, 1885–1890

Review: Brock Cheney. Plain but Wholesome: Foodways of the Mormon Pioneers

Review: J. Spencer Fluhman. “A Peculiar People”:Anti-Mormonism and the Making of Religion in Nineteenth-Century America

Review: Edward J. Blum and Paul Harvey, The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America

“My Principality on Earth Began”: Millennialism and the Celestial Kingdom in the Development of Mormon Doctrine

“The Highest Class of Adulterers and Whoremongers”: Plural Marriage, the Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite), and the Construction of Memory

Dialogue 46.2 (Spring 2016): 1–39
Blythe shows the denial among Culterites followers that the founder was involved in plural marriage.

Review: Patrick Q. Mason, J. David Pulsipher, and Richard L. Bushman, eds. War and Peace in Our Time: Mormon Perspectives

Review: Robert S. McPherson, Jim Dandy, and Sarah E. Burak. Navajo Tradition, Mormon Life: The Autobiography and Teachings of Jim Dandy

Review: Irene M. Bates and E. Gary Smith. Lost Legacy: The Mormon Office of the Presiding Patriarch H. Michael Marquardt, ed. Early Patriarchal Blessings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints H. Michael Marquardt, ed. Later Patriarchal Blessi

The Kirtland Temple as a Shared Space: A Conversation with David J. Howlett

Dialogue 47.1 (Spring 2014): 104–123
An oral interview between an LDS Member and a Community of Christ member regarding the history of the Kirtland Temple. They explain that despite differences in religious beliefs, people can still form friendships and cooperate.

Review: Stephen H. Webb. Mormon Christianity: What Other Christians Can Learn from the Latter-day Saints

Dialoguing Online: The Best of 10+ Years of Mormons Blogging

A Swelling Tide: Nineteen-Year-Old Sister Missionaries in the Twenty-First Century

Mormon Feminism: The Next Forty Years

Dialogue 47.4 (Winter 2014): 167–180
Brooks talks about the period from 1970s Mormon feminism in Boston to the present and imagines what needs to be part of the future. She identifies five areas for Mormon feminism: theology, institutions, racial inclusion, financial independence, and spiritual independence.

Review: Full Lives but Not Fulfilling Paula Kelly Harline. The Polygamous Wives Writing Club: From the Diaries of Mormon Pioneer Women

The Present, Past, and Future of LDS Financial Transparency

Review: Confident Interpretations of Silence David Conley Nelson. Moroni and the Swastika: Mormons in Nazi Germany

The Last Memory: Joseph F. Smith and Lieux de Mémoire in Late Nineteenth-Century Mormonism

Mormon Dissent in the Age of Fracture

When fifteen hundred progressive Mormons attended Sunstone Symposium in August 1992, they did so in protest. The symposium had become a center point in the growing battle between Latter-day Saint leaders and activists, especially as…

The Enduring Vertigo of the Elect Lady Libbie Grant, The Prophet’s Wife

Of the legacy of Joseph Smith, historian Bernard DeVoto wrote in 1936, “The vision perishes; it is the vertigo that endures.” Reading the novel The Prophet’s Wife by Libbie Grant is to feel that same…

From Private Dreams to Public Damnings George D. Smith, ed., Brigham Young, Colonizer of the American West: Diaries and Office Journals, 1832–1871

Searching For Sally Virginia Kerns, Sally in Three Worlds: An Indian Captive in the House of Brigham Young

Pioneer Mother

Listen to this piece here.  I come from a family of Mormons, although perhaps somewhat unorthodox ones. Somewhere in England and what is today Romania, my father’s ancestors heard of a man named Joseph Smith…

Joseph Smith’s History: It’s Complicated Ronald O. Barney, Joseph Smith: History, Methods, and Memory

Missing and Restoring Meaning

Fifty years ago I was living in Cambridge, Massachusetts in a shotgun apartment just off Mass. Ave. at Central Square: 22 Magazine Street, Apt. 3. Spring 1971 marked the last months of my master of…

Smoot in New Light

The eight essays in this collection describe and interpret the US Senate’s investigation of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints during the Progressive Era. Nominally an investigative hearing on the election of Utah…

Establishing Zion in the Heat of Battle

On April 13, 2021, President Biden announced that the United States would be withdrawing its troops from Afghanistan, indicating a shift in American foreign policy in the Middle East. Saints at War: The Gulf War,…

“O My Mother”: Mormon Fundamentalist Mothers in Heaven and Women’s Authority

Dialogue 55.1 (Spring 2022): 119–135
As the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints moved away from the plural marriage revelation, a marital system that created the cosmological backdrop for the doctrine of Heavenly Mothers, the status of the divine feminine became increasingly distant from the lived experience of LDS women. Ecclesiastical changes altered women’s place within the cosmos.

Salt Lake City, 1957

Podcast version of this piece. Sunday morning in Salt Lake City, whenfaithful Mormons flock to worshipat neighborhood wards, my father’ssecret psychiatric patients slip insidethe back door of 508 East South Temple,for fifty-five-minute appointments.A nurse impersonator,…

Historic Sites Holy Envy Sara M. Patterson, Pioneers in the Attic: Place and Memory Along the Mormon Trail

When it comes to sacred places, I feel considerable holy envy toward the Latter-day Saints. Their sacred sites stretch across the continent, from Vermont to California. Mormons can visit their founding prophet’s birthplace, the grove…

The Words and Worlds of Smith and Brown Samuel Morris Brown, Joseph Smith’s Translation: The Words and Worlds of Early Mormonism

In 1887 Albert Michelson and Edward Morley performed what was intended to be the crowning accomplishment of physics—an experiment to determine how movement through the luminiferous ether changed the speed of light. What they found…

Unpacking Gender and Sexuality in Contemporary Mormonism Taylor G. Petrey, Tabernacles of Clay: Sexuality and Gender in Modern Mormonism

Inevitably at some point, due to structural white patriarchal privilege and a central and abiding concern with discrete gendered bodies and heteronormative relations, the teachings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints will…

Review: On Truth-Telling and Positionalities P. Jane Hafen and Brenden W. Rensink, eds., Essays on American Indian and Mormon History

I struggle with beginnings. I always just want to get to it. However, allow me to take a bit of time to introduce myself before I tell the story of my experience with the collection…

Review: Unerasing Shoshone Testaments of Survival, Faith, and Hope Darren Parry, The Bear River Massacre

Although Darren Parry claims to not begrudge the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, he does not hold back when addressing the injustices and wrongs that his people have faced at the expense of…

Review: Brigham Young Wanted Every Thing  From the Indians Will Bagley, ed., The Whites Want Every Thing: Indian-Mormon Relations, 1847–1877

Will Bagley is a historian who has written and edited more than a dozen books on Mormon (The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints) history and the American West. His best known work is…

Roundtable: Time to Let Go of Columbus

For me, as a Native American member of the Church, I approach the hero worship of Columbus perhaps more critically and apprehensively than the average member would. I was taught that he was a man…

Roundtable: Columbus Day and the “Rest of the Story”

Fall of 2010 was the beginning of my last year as an undergraduate at BYU studying public health. I had just returned from an internship in Washington, DC with the Office of Minority Health (OMH).…

Roundtable: I Am Giving Columbus No More of My Time

In 2017, the First Presidency of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints issued a statement condemning “white supremacist attitudes.” As a member of the Church who also knows the history, erasure, and pain…

Politicking with the Saints: On Reading Benjamin Park’s Kingdom of Nauvoo Benjamin E. Park, Kingdom of Nauvoo: The Rise and Fall of a Religious Empire on the American Frontier

In an era awash in a sea of reboots and re-examinations, one may be forgiven for initially wondering why yet another treatment of Mormon Nauvoo is strictly necessary. The city, after all, has received its…

Matthew L. Harris, ed., Thunder from the Right: Ezra Taft Benson in Mormonism and Politics

The Politics of Mormon History

Mormon Modernity David Walker. Railroading Religion: Mormons, Tourists, and the Corporate Spirit of the West

Railroading Religion is a welcome addition to the influx of timely scholarship published in anticipation of the 150-year anniversary of the Golden Spike ceremony. The tensions between religion, geography, and history provide a thought-provoking backdrop to…

Remembering Jane Manning James Quincy D. Newell. Your Sister in the Gospel: The Life of Jane Manning James, a Nineteenth-Century Black Mormon

In this carefully researched work, Quincy D. Newell produces a powerful narrative of Jane Manning James’s life from limited records. Newell reveals what life was like for someone like James, whom she refers to as…

Modern Mormonism, Gender, and the Tangled Nature of History Gregory A. Prince. Gay Rights and the Mormon Church

Few topics have dominated modern Mormon discourse as much as those related to homosexuality. Especially following the contentious and engrossing debates surrounding Proposition 8—the electoral battle in California in 2008 over the legality of same-sex…

Latter-Day Screens: Mormonism in Popular Culture Brenda R. Weber. Latter-Day Screens: Gender, Sexuality & Mediated Mormonism

Latter-day Screens is a fascinating, compelling, and, at times, frustrating look at a wide range of Mormon-related media. This is largely due to the central conceit of the book—essentially working with Mormonism as a meme and…

History Written in Celluloid Randy Astle. Mormon Cinema: Origins to 1952

In March of 1895, in Paris, Auguste and Louis Lumière screened ten short, single-shot films for an audience of two hundred, and the movies were born. Less than ten months later, after years of petitioning,…

A Commentary on Joseph Smith’s Revision of First Corinthians

Dialogue 53.2 (Summer 2020): 57–106
Although Smith desired to publish the new translation, circumstances were such that publication at that time was not possible.

What Size of City, and What Sort of City, Could (or Should) the City of Zion Be?

Why the Prophet is a Puzzle: The Challenges of Using Psychological Perspectives to Understand the Character and Motivation of Joseph Smith, Jr.

Dialogue 53.2 (Summer 2020): 1–35
This article will explore how one of the most open-ended psychological interpretations of Smith’s prophetic leadership and motivation might contribute to better understanding the trajectory of this extraordinarily talented and conflicted individual whose life has so deeply impacted the religious movement he founded and, increasingly, the larger world.

A 1945 Perspective

“For the Power is In Them”: Leonard Arrington and the Founders of Exponent II

The Other Crime: Abortion and Contraception in Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Utah

Dialogue 53.1 (Spring 2020): 33–47
In this essay, I discuss this history, present evidence that Latter-day Saint men sold abortion pills in the late nineteenth century, and argue that it is likely some Latter-day Saint women took them in an attempt to restore menstrual cycles that anemia, pregnancy, or illness had temporarily “stopped.” Women living in the twenty-first century are unable to access these earlier understandings of pregnancy because the way we understand pregnancy has changed as a result of debates over the criminalization of abortion and the development of ultrasound technology.

Worthy of Their Hire? Mormon Leaders’ Relationship with Wealth D. Michael Quinn. The Mormon Hierarchy: Wealth and Corporate Power.

Proving Subcontraries: In memoriam G. Eugene England, 1933–2001

“There Is No Equality”: William E. Berrett, BYU, and Healing the Wounds of Racism in the Latter-day Saint Past and Present

Dialogue 52.3 (Fall 2019): 62–83
De Schweintiz documents how students at BYU still hear racist reasons for the priesthood/temple ban in classes, missions, Gospel Doctrine, sacrament meeting talks and even in books published by the Church.

Feminism, Polygamy, and Murder John Bennion. An Unarmed Woman.

John Bennion’s work is set in the late 1880s and focuses on plural marriage through the lens of a murder mystery.

British Latter Day Saint Conscientious Objectors in World War I

Dialogue 51.4 (Winter 2018): 49–76
What of the Latter Day Saint movement that claimed to prophetically discern the times and seasons of these latter days and also boldly proclaimed that they were the restoration church?

The Restoration of Conscientious Objection

Letter to the Editor

Review: Priesthood Power Jonathan A. Stapley. The Power of Godliness: Mormon Liturgy and Cosmology download

Review: An Essential Conversation Matthew L. Harris and Newell G. Bringhurst, eds. The Mormon Church & Blacks: A Documentary History

The Pioneer Woman, St. George

Martin Luther King Jr. and Mormonism: Dialogue, Race, and Pluralism

Dialogue 51.3 (Fall 2018): 131–153
This essay provides an outline for how to have a more robust intrafaith dialogue about race among members of the LDS church. Using principles from Martin Luther King, Jr. about dialogue on race, Whitaker argues for the need for greater dialogue to overcome the past.

Mormons & Lineage: The Complicated History of Blacks & Patriarchal Blessings, 1830–2018

Dialogue 51.3 (Fall 2018): 83–129
The priesthood revelation of 1978 eased some of the tension when the apostles affirmed that Blacks could now be “adopted into the House of Israel” as full participants in Mormon liturgical rites. But this doctrinal shift did not resolve the vexing question of whether or not Black people derived from the “seed of Cain.”

Looking Back, Looking Forward: “Mormonism’s Negro Doctrine” 45 Years Later

It has been forty-five years since Dialogue published Bush’s essay entitled “Mormonism’s Negro Doctrine: An Historical Overview”2 and forty years since Official Declaration 2 ended the priesthood/temple ban.

Remember Me: Discursive Needlework and the Sewing Sampler of Patty Bartlett Sessions

Thomas Aquinas Meets Joseph Smith: Toward a Mormon Ethics of Natural Law

The Word of Wisdom in Contemporary American Mormonism: Perceptions and Practice

Authority and Priesthood in the LDS Church, Part 2: Ordinances, Quorums, Nonpriesthood Authority, Presiding, Priestesses, and Priesthood Bans

Dialogue 51.1 (Spring 2018): 167–180
In the prequel to this article, I discussed in general contours the dual nature of authority—individual and institutional—and how the modern LDS concept of priesthood differs significantly from the ancient version in that it has become an abstract form of authority that can be “held” (or withheld, as the case might be).

The Darkest Abyss in America

Yearning for Notoriety: Questionable and False Claimants to America’s Worst Emigrant Massacre

A History of Two Stories: Women of Covenant: The Story of Relief Society

Preparation for the Kingdom

Joseph Smith and the Sources of Love

The Quest for Religious Authority and the Rise of Mormonism

The Faith of a Psychologist: A Personal Document

The Autobiography of Parley P. Pratt: Some Literary, Historical, and Critical Reflections

Scholarly Studies of Mormonism in the Twentieth Century

The Church and the Law

Mormonism and American Religion

Brigham Young and the American Economy

Anti-Intellectualism in Mormon History: Thoughts on Anti-Intellectualism: A Response

Anti-Intellectualism in Mormon History

The Life of Brigham Young: A Biography Which Will Not Be Written

Federal Authority Versus Polygamic Theocracy: James B. McKean and the Mormons, 1870-1875

Dialogue 5.3 (Fall 1966): 85–100
During the years of the Utah Territory, outsiders got appointed to the terrority to serve in various positions. For the most part, these Gentiles weren’t sympathetic towards the church, and one of the more famous outsiders is Chief Justice James B. McKean who tried to crack down on plural marriage.

The Metamorphosis of the Kingdom of God: Toward a Reinterpretation of Mormon History

Writing the Mormon Past

Dialogue 1.3 (Fall 1966): 47–62
Understanding Mormon history involves appreciating some of the formidable obstacles which confront throse who seek to write it. There is still sensitivity among Mormons to probing that might bring embarrassment to cherished offical views of Latter-day Saint orgins, martyrs, or heroes. 

The Significance of Joseph Smith’s “First Vision” in Mormon Thought

Dialogue 1.3 (Fall 1966): 29–46
In this early article, Allen shows that the First Vision was not well known during Joseph Smith’s lifetime. It became well known after the Prophet’s death, which is when missionaries started to teach about it for the first time.

Introduction: The Future of Mormonism

Early Mormon Churches in Utah: A Photographic Essay

The Legend of Porter Rockwell

“’I Never Knew a Time When I Did Not Know Joseph Smith”: A Son’s Record Of The Life And Testimony Of Sidney Rigdon

Dialogue 1.4 (Spring 1966): 15–42
Not very long after the death of Sidney Rigdon, the influential preacher and compatriate to Joseph Smith in the first years of the Church, his son, John Wickliffe Rigdon, wrote an apology for his father.

The “Legend” and the “Case” of Joe Hill

Christ Without the Church: The Challenge of Dietrich Bonhoeffer

Strange People in a Strange Land: The Far Southwest, 1846-1912: A Territorial History by Howard Roberts Lamar

A Kingdom to Come: Quest for Empire: The Political Kingdom of God and the Council of Fifty in Mormon History

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: An Interview with Dr. Fischer

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: An Interview with Dr. Fischer

Dialogue 2.4 (Winter 1967)57.
here are eleven documents. In addition, there is a letter of presentation from the family of Joseph Smith. The documents in question are fragments of funerary papyri; that is, fragments of long scrolls containing texts intended for the benefit of the deceased and placed in the dead man’s tomb.

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: An Interview with Dr. Fischer

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: An Interview with Dr. Fischer

The Facsimile Found: The Recovery of Joseph Smith’s Papyrus Manuscripts: A Conversation with Professor Atiya

Dialogue 2.4 (Winter 1967)51– 54.
Although not a member of the Church, Dr. Atiya for many years had cherished his Latter-day Saint friends and is well informed about Church beliefs. He is aware of the history of the papyri and their relationship to the Book of Abraham in the Pearl of Great Price and is acquainted with the three facsimiles.

Some Reflections on the Kingdom and the Gathering in Early Mormon History

Dialogue 9.1 (Spring 1976): 34–42
Historical studies embrace the most extensive, intensive, and well-matured of the scholarly endeavors which have the Restoration as their subject. The paucity of critical writings in the various fields of theology and philosophy is by comparison especially striking.

Learning to Lead: The Church Executive ; The Ten Most Wanted Men

On the Mormon Trail: Mormon Trail form Vermont to Utah by Alma P. Burton, The Travelers’ Guide to Historic Mormon America

Storybook Grandmothers: Mary Fielding Smith

The Divinity in Humanity: You Shall Be As Gods by Erich Fromm

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: Phase One

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968)101 – 105
Even a casual reading of the Book of Abraham shows that the story refers not so much to unique historic events as to ritual forms and traditions—all these must be checked. So far we have heard what is wrong or at least suspect about the Book of Abraham, but as yet nobody has cared to report on the other side of the picture. It is for that we are saving our footnotes.

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: The Book of Breathings

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968)98
THE BOOK OF BREATHINGS (FRAGMENT I, THE “SENSEN” TEXT, WITH RESTORATIONS FROM LOUVRE PAPYRUS 3284) translated by Richard A. Parker

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: The Source of the Book of Abraham Identified

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968): 92–97
A description of the alleged Egyptain papyri used by Joseph Smith to translate the Book of Abraham

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: The Source of the Book of Abraham Identified

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: A Tentative Approach to the Book of Abraham

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968):89 – 92
It appears that in time the mystery of the Book of Abraham will be unveiled. Meanwhile, it is significant for the Reorganized Church that undue haste and overzealous faith did not move it in the nineteenth century to canonize this work of Joseph Smith, Jr., primarily on the basis that it was accomplished by Joseph Smith, Jr.

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: The Joseph Smith Papyri: A Preliminary Report

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968):86 – 88
The papyri need to be carefully cleaned and straightened and then rephotographed with care to illuminate the under side somewhat to eliminate all shadows in cracks and breaks, which can frequently look just like writing.

The Joseph Smith Egyptian Papyri: Translations and Interpretations: A Summary Report

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968):67 – 85
The Joseph Smith Egyptian papyri once consisted of at least six separate documents, possibly eight or more.

The Search for Truth and Meaning in Mormon History

Joseph Smith as a Student of Hebrew

Dialogue 3.2 (Summer 1968): 41–55
Zucker describes the efforts that Joseph Smith went through to study Hebrew. Joseph Smith’s personal behavior was apparently not changed, but in other aspects in later years there is evidence that Joseph Smith was using Hebrew language structure

Mrs. Brodie and Joseph Smith: Exploding the Myth about Joseph Smith, the Mormon Prophet by F.L. Stewart

Dialogue 3.3 (Fall 1968): 142–145
In response to Fawn Brodies’s biography of Joseph Smith, F.L. Stewart published a book called Exploding the Myth About Joseph Smith, the Mormon Prophet.

A Mirror for Mormon’s: The City of the Saints by Richard F. Burton, edited and with an introduction by Fawn M. Brodie

One Man’s Utah: History of Utah by Wayne Stout

Whose Victory? Fantastic Victory by W. Cleo Skousen

A Translation of the Apparent Source of the Book of Abraham

Mormons in the Executive Suite

Art and the Church

Manhattan Faces

Mormons as City Planners

The Challenge of Secularism

Villa Mae

A Time of Transition

A Personal Commitment to Civil Equality

Reflections at Hopkins House

Mormons in the Urban Community

Joseph Smith’s Presidential Platform: The Political Legacy of Joseph Smith

Joseph Smith’s Presidential Platform: Joseph Smith and the Presidency, 1844

The Changing Image of Mormonism

B.H. Roberts as an Historian

Mormons and Psychiatry

Income and Membership Projections for the Church Through the Year 2000

Concern for the Urban Condition

The Intellectual Tradition of the Latter-day Saints

The Joseph Smith Papyri

Toward a History of Ancient America

Dialogue 4.2 (Summer 1971): 65–68
If there is no history of ancient Antarctica, there is a valid reason for it. Stone Age man penetrated every continent except Antarctica, and until mod￾ern times, Antarctica was unexplored

Governor Thomas Ford and the Murderers of Joseph Smith

Dialogue 4.2 (Summer 1969): 41–52
Member and non members have criticized Governor Thomas Ford of Illinois for his inability to save Joseph Smith and his brother Hyrum. Huntress was arguing that Governor Ford had a lot of difficulties that he had to deal with at that time.

The Arab-Israeli Conflict: A Mormon Dilemma?

The Reliability of the Early History of Lucy and Joseph Smith

Dialogue 4.2 (Summer 1971): 13–28
Mormon history is a part of this magnificent proliferation of data and research techniques. Its own archives are in the midst of classification by professionally competent standards. There is hope for a new era, in which Mormon and non-Mormon may meet on the common ground of objective fact.

Literature in the History of the Church: The Importance of Involvement

A Commentary of Stephen G. Taggart’s Mormonism’s Negro Policy: Social and Historical Origins

Dialogue 4.4 (Winter 1969): 86–103
Lester E Bush wrote in response to Stephen G Taggart’s book which the author tried to show that the Church came from abololonist ideas because the Church was orginially founded in New York, but when they encountered pro slavery settlers in Missouri and faced the hostiltiy from the settlers early church leaders apparently changed their mind, even though Joseph Smith eventually did a turnabout from what records have shown regarding African Americans.

The Secular Relevance of the Gospel Since Cumorah by Hugh W. Nibley

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: President McKay As a Neighbor

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: On Shaking Hands with David O. McKay

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: The Prophet is Dead

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: Reflections on the Ministry of President David O. McKay

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: “When Spirit Speaks to Spirit”

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: A Man of Love and Personal Concern

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: Tribute to President David O. McKay

President David O. McKay: 1873-1970: My Memories of President David O. McKay

Willard Young: The Prophet’s Son at West Point

Spiritual Problems in the Teaching of Modern Literature

Faithful History

Sources of Mormon History in Illinois, 1832-48, and A Bibliographic Note

The Church and the Orient: The Church Encounters Asia by Spencer J. Palmer

Another View of the Mormons: The Mormons: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints by Kathleen Elgin

Dialogue East: Courage: A Journal of History, Thought, and Action

The Manipulation of History | Can We Manipulate the Past? By Fawn Brodie

Dialogue 5.3 (Fall 1970): 96–99
Marvin S Hill was responding to Fawn Brodie’s lecture at the Hotel Utah in 1970 called “Can We Manipulate the Past?” Her point in giving it was she was claiming that the people in charge only emphasize the points of history that fit their gains. She then compared that to Church Leaders only focusing on Joseph Smith’s early attitudes towards slavery, but then she claimed that Church Leaders didn’t focus on the fact that in the future he changed his mind regarding Slavery and became more against it, kind of like Abraham Lincoln and Jefferson. Marvin S Hill kept mentioning that she overlooked certain aspects.

The Coming of the Manifesto

Dialogue 5.3 (Fall 1970): 11–25
Godfrey describes the steps leading to Wilford Woodruff issuing the First Manifesto.

The Lesson of Coalville

The Last Days of the Coalville Tabernacle

A Comment on Joseph Smith’s Account of His First Vision and the 1820 Revival

Dialogue 6.1 (Spring 1971): 106–107
Ever since people first heard of the First Vision, the events surrounding it has been clouded by controversy. Crawley comments with historical references that help to clarify this controversy.

Joseph Smith, An American Muhammad? An Essay On the Perils of Historical Analogy

Dialogue 6.1 (Spring 1971): 46–58
Since around the time as the martyrdom, Joseph Smith has been compared to Muhammad who was the founder of Islam. Green and Goldrup presents evidence for how Islam and the church are different.

Blessed Damozels: Women in Mormon History

God and Man in History

The Sterling M. McMurring Papers

Modern Biblical Scholarship: The Cambridge History of the Bible, Vol. 1

From Gadfly to Watchdog: The First 100 Years: A History of the Salt Lake Tribune by O.N. Malmquist

A Prophet’s Goodly Grandparents: Joseph Smith’s New England Heritage by Richard Lloyd Anderson

Brodie Revisited: A Reappraisal: No Man Knows My History by Faun Brodie

Mormonism as an Eddy in American Religious History: A Religious History of the American People by Sydney Ahlstrom

James E. Talmage: A Personal History: The Talmage Story: Life of James E. Talmage by John R. Talmage

New Essays on Mormon History: The Restoration Movement: Essays in Mormon History

J. Golden Kimball: Apostle and Folk Hero: The Golden Legacy: A Folk History of J. Golden Kimball

Judah Among the Ephriamites: History of the Jews in Utah and Idaho by Juanita Brooks

Some Reflections on the New Mormon History

Riding Herd: A Conversation with Juanita Brooks

Riding Herd: A Conversation with Juanita Brooks

“No Continuing City””: Reading a Local History: Provo: A Story of People in Motion

A Hint of an Explanation: The Message of the Joseph Smith Papyri: an Egyptian Endowment by Hugh Nibley

Dialogue 9.4 (Winter 1974): 74–75
Review of An Egyptian Endowment by Hugh Nibley, which discusses the papyri that Joseph Smith allegedly used to help translate the Book of Abraham. Hugh Nibley decided to state his case, but allow readers to form their own conclusions after reading it.

A Little-Known Defense of Polygamy from the Mormon Press in 1842

Dialogue 9.4 (Winter 1974): 21–34
Foster points out that in 1842 an unpublished pamphlet was written called “The Peace Maker” that expressed its support for polygamy. It is the first-known defense of polygamy before 1852.

The Law Above the Law: Carthage Conspiracy: The Trial of the Accused Assassins of Joseph Smith

Dialogue 10.1 (1975-1976): 84–86
Review of Carthage Conspiracy: The Trial of the Accused Assassins of Joseph Smith coauthored by Dallin H. Oaks and Marvin S. Hill regarding the trial of Joseph Smith and his brother’s Hyrum deaths. Jensen argues that this book is a mustread for anyone who is interested in ‘Mormon history, philosophy, and the law.’

Photography as History: Through Camera Eyes, Nelson B. Wadsworth

Mormonism and Labor: Deseret’s Sons of Toil, A History of the Worker Movements of Territorial Utah, 1852-1896

Robert Leroy Parker on Family History: Butch Cassidy, My Brother by Lulu Parker Betenson ; In Search of Butch Cassidy

An Enduring History: Utah: A Bicentennial History by Charles S. Petersen

Fate and the Persecutors of Joseph Smith: Transmutations of an American Myth

Dialogue 11.4 (1977): 63-70
In the 1950s there was a book published call Fate of the Persecutors of Joseph Smith, which contains stories that have been part of folklore that have been passed down discussing what happened to the people who helped kill Joseph Smith.

Generalized Hatred: The Women’s Room by Marilyn French

Fishing for Emma: Joseph and Emma Companions by Roy A. Cheville ; Judge Me Dear Reader by Erwin E. Wirkus

Two Venturesome Women: Not By Bread Alone: The journal of Martha Spence Heywood, 1850-1856

The Cost of Living in Kirtland: The Kirtland Economy Revisited: A Market Critique of Sectarian Economics

Faith and History: The Snell Controversy

State-of-the-Art-Mormon-History: The Mormon Experience: A History of the Latter-day Saints

A Priestly Role for a Prophetic Church: The RLDS Church and Black Americans

Dialogue 12.2 (Summer 1979): 37–50
In recent years many RLDS Church members have been proud of the fact that the church has been ordaining blacks into the priesthood since early in its history. Sometimes they have made unfavorable comparisons between RLDS policy and that of their cousins in Utah who denied holy orders to black men and women until last year when half of the restriction was lifted.

Elijah Abel and the Changing Status of Blacks Within Mormonism

Dialogue 12.2 (Summer 1979): 22–36
Elijah Abel, a black man ordained to the priesthood, was restricted in his church participation starting in 1843, even though he was well respected by both members and leaders. Newell G. Bringhurst discusses why the priesthood and temple ban might have occured. One of the reasons was when the pioneers were crossing the plains, a man by the name of William McCary, who had Native American and African American ancestry, caused a lot of grief and trouble for both saints and the leaders of the Church.

Saint Without Priesthood: The Collected Testimonies of Ex-Slave Samuel D. Chambers

Dialogue 12.2 (Summer 1979): 13–21
The editors of Dialogue in 1979 compiled the testimonies of a former slave, Samuel Chambers, who was a member of the church.

Introduction

Utah in One Volume: Utah’s History edited by Richard D. Poll, Thomas G. Alexander, Eugene E. Campbell and David E. Miller

Peripheral Mormondom: The Frenetic Frontier

The Orson Pratt-Brigham Young Controversies: Conflict Within the Quorums, 1853 to 1868

Joseph Smith and Thomas Paine?: Mormon Answer to Skepticism: Why Joseph Smith Wrote the Book of Mormon by Robert N. Hullinger

Mormonism: From Its New York Beginnings

An Hour in the Grove

Fawn McKay Brodie: An Oral History Interview

Local History, Well Done: Corinne: The Gentile Capital of Utah by Brigham D. Madsen

The Writing of Latter-day Saints History: Problems, Accomplishments and Admonitions

Sensational Virtue: Nineteenth-Century Mormon Fiction and American Popular Taste

Joseph Smith and the Structure of Mormon Identity

Dialogue 14.3 (Fall 1981): 89–100
Joseph Smith’s 1838 account of the First Vision has taken priority in structuring Mormon identity, despite the existence of different versions. This article explores why that version is so meaningful to Latter-day Saints, reflecting on the symbolic strucutre of the account.

The Word of Wisdom: From Principle to Requirement

Did the Word of Wisdom Become a Commandment in 1851?

The Word of Wisdom in Early Nineteenth-Century Perspective

The Fading of the Pharaoh’s Curse: The Decline and Fall of the Priesthood Ban Against Blacks

Dialogue 14.3 (Fall 1981): 11–45
Mauss situates the 1978 revelation on the priesthood in modern American historical context. Everything changed for the Church during the Civil Rights Movement when people both inside and outside the Church were harshly critcizing the priesthood ban. When the world was changing, it looked like the Church was still adherring to the past.

An “Inside-Outsider” in Zion

Joseph Smith III’s 1844 Blessing and the Mormons of Utah

Joseph Smith: “The Gift of Seeing”

Dialogue 15.2 (Summer 1982): 48–68
Van Wagoner and Walker focus on the seer stones that Joseph Smith used in the Book of Mormon translation process.

Thoughts on the Mormon Scriptures: An Outsider’s View of the Inspiration of Joseph Smith

An Introduction to Mormon Administrative History

The Millennial Hymns of Parley P. Pratt

A Survey of Current Theses and Dissertations

A Bluestocking in Zion: The Literary Life of Emmeline B. Wells

Forgotten Relief Societies, 1844-67

From Apostle to Apostate: The Personal Struggle of Amasa Mason Lyman

The Seventies in the 1880s: Revelations and Reorganizing

Allegiance and Stewardship: Holy War, Just War, and the Mormon Tradition in the Nuclear Age

“The Fullness of the Priesthood”: The Second Anointing in Latter-day Saint Theology and Practice

Voices from the Dust: Women in Zion: Women’s Voices: An Untold History of the Latter-day Saints, 1830-1900

A Personal Odyssey: My Encounter with Mormon History

Swarming Progeny of the Restoration: Divergent Paths of the Restoration: A History of the Latter Day Saint Movement

Saints You Can Sink Your Teeth Into: Kindred Saints: The Mormon Immigrant Heritage of Alvin and Kathryn Christensen

Notes on Brigham Young’s Aesthetics

Faithful History/Secular Faith

Rx With a Historical Slant: Medicine and the Mormons: An Introduction to the History of Latter-day Saint Health Care

Moving Swiftly Upon the Waters: Saints on the Seas: A Maritime History of Mormon Migration 1830-1890 by Conway B. Sonne

A Physician’s Reflections on Old Testament Medicine

Refracted Visions and Future Worlds: Mormonism and Science Fiction

Emma Smith Through Her Writings

The Emma Smith Lore Reconsidered

Joseph Smith and Process Theology

Book of Mormon Usage in Early LDS Theology

Dialogue 17.3 (Fall 1984): 37–75
As one step in that direction, this article explores Book of Mormon usage in the pre-Utah period (1830—46), and seeks answers to the following questions: Which passages from the Book of Mormon were cited and with what frequency? How were they understood?

Religious Accommodation in the Land of Racial Democracy

Dialogue 17.3 (Fall 1984): 23–34
Brazil, with a high concentration of African heritage, was a difficult place for the Church (because of the Church’s racial policy) to make headway among native members. Due to the high risk of Brazilians potentially having African ancestry, the Church came to the point where they eventually discouraged missionaries in Brazil from baptizing anyone who is known to have African ancestry.

A Shaded View: Suribonnet Sisters: True Stories of Mormon Women and Frontier Life

Bleaker by the Dozen?: Life in Large Families: View of Mormon Women, by H. M. Bahr, S. J. Condie, and K. Goodman

Paul: Early-Day Saint: Understanding Paul by Richard Lloyd Anderson

Emigrant Guides: The Latter-day Saints’ Emigrants’ Guide by W. Clayton, ed. by Stanley B. Kimball

“The Same Organization?”: The First Urban Christians by Wayne A. Meeks

Meet the Author of The Prophet of Palmyra: Thomas Gregg: Early Illinois Journalist and Author by John W. Hallwas

Genealogical Blockbuster: The Source: A Guidebook of American Genealogy, ed. by Arlene H. Eakle and Johni Cerny

Sister Sense and Hard Facts: Mormon Enigma: Emma Hale Smith by Linda King Newell and Valeen Tippetts Avery

Missionary to the Mind: Dialogues with Myself: Personal Essays on Mormon Experience by Eugene England

Fast and Loose Freemasonry: Mormonism and Freemasonry

Faithful History: The Heavens Resound: A History of the Latter-day Saints in Ohio, 1830-1838 by Milton V. Backman, Jr.

In Silence She Speaks: Not in Vain by Susan Evans McCloud

Exiles for the Principle: LDS Polygamy in Canada

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 108–116
Embry describes the role that polygamy played in the forming of Cardston Canada, both Pre-Manifesto and Post Manifesto.

Mothers and Daughters in Polygamy

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 99–107
An analysis of what the individual wives’ roles are in the 19th century among plural marriages. Embry and Bradley make the argument that the daughters in a polygamous relationship pay attention to how their own mom is doing, which determines whether or not when they are older they enter into a polygamous relationship.

Women’s Response to Plural Marriage

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 84–98
Mehr shares stories of polygamy in late 19th century and early 20th century. He especially focused on LDS women’s opinions of polygamy when they entered into polygamous relationsips.

Mormon Polyandry in Nauvoo

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 67–83
Van Wagoner defines polyandry as having two or more husbands at the same time. He identifies women who ended up marrying members of the Twelve or Joseph Smith while they were were already married to their own husband

Government-Sponsored Prayer in the Classroom

LDS Women and Priesthood: An Expanded Definition of Priesthood: Some Present and Future Consequences

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 35–42
In seeking to predict what might occur in the Church if priesthood were extended to women, it is helpful to focus attention on some of these organizational dynamics.

LDS Women and Priesthood: The Historical Relationship of Mormon Women and Priesthood

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 21–32
While an examination of that history leaves unanswered the question of women’s ordination to the priesthood, the historical overview of LDS women’s relationship to priesthood suggests a more expansive view than many members now hold.

LDS Women and Priesthood: Scriptural Precedents for Priesthood

Dialogue 18.3 (Fall 1985): 15–20
I have heard many LDS women approach the issue of women and the priesthood by protesting that they do not want to hold the priesthood because they have no interest in passing the sacrament or performing some other ecclesiastical duty. I will venture a guess that many men who have the priesthood do not particularly want to hold it either, and that some of them also have no interest in passing the sacrament. But the reluctance of some men would hardly be a good reason to prevent all men from holding the priesthood.

The Ultimate Stegner Interview: Conversations with Wallace Stegner on Western History and Literature

The Benefits of Partisanship: Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism by Richard L. Bushman

Joseph Smith and the Clash of Sacred Cultures

Dialogue 18.4 (Winter 1984): 65–80
Shortly after the church was organized, one of Joseph Smith’s main priorities during his lifetime was preaching to the Native Americans, who he believed to be the descendants of the Lamanites.

Joseph Smith, Sr., Dreams of His Namesake

In loco parentis — Alive and Well in Provo: Brigham Young University: A House of Faith

The United Order of Joseph Smith’s Times

The Restoration and History: New Testament Christianity

Joseph Smith and the Plurality of Worlds Idea

A Survey of Current Dissertations

Historiography and the New Mormon History: A Historian’s Perspective

Eastward to Eden: The Nauvoo Rescue Missions

Objectivity and History

Leadership and the Ethics of Prophecy

Dialogue 19.4 (Winter 1986): 77–85
The role of leadership within the Mormon community is vastly interrelated, and thus often confused , with management.

Document Dealing: A Dealer’s Response

The Document Diggers and Their Discoveries: A Panel

Martin Harris: Mormonism’s Early Convert

Dale Morgan’s Unfinished Mormon History: Dale Morgan on Early Mormonism: Correspondence and a New History

Polygamy Examined: Mormon Polygamy: A History by Richard Van Wagoner

Determining and Defining “Wife”: The Brigham Young Households

Refugee Converts: One Stake’s Experience

Brave New Bureaucracy

BIG D/little d: The View from the Basement

Balance and Faith: The Latter-day Saints: A Contemporary History of the Church of Jesus Christ by William E. Berrett

“The Truth Is the Most Important Thing””: The New Mormon History According to Mark Hofmann

God’s Hand in Mormon History: The Church in the Twentieth Century: The Impressive Story of the Advancing Kingdom

Who Came in Second?

Why Were Scholars Misled? What Can We Learn From This?

The “New Mormon History” Reassessed in Light of Recent Book on Joseph Smith and Mormon Origins

The Need for a New Mormon Heaven

Dialogue 21.3 (Fall 1988): 73–85
I used to love this description because my Mormon heaven seemed far superior to this standard Christian heaven that Twain’s Satan describes. Sexual intercourse does have a place in Mormon heaven, though not as an end in itself. Heavenly residents are busy with activities. Those righteous individuals who become gods in Mormon heaven will certainly be using their intellects as they create worlds and keep them running, and they will undoubtedly be learning continuously. Mormonism never suggested there would be continual music, nor continual church or Sabbath days in heaven.

Voyage of the Brooklyn

The Trial of the French Mission

Freeways, Parking Lots, and Ice Cream Stands: The Three Nephites in Contemporary Society

Honoring Arrington: New Views of Mormon History: Essays in Honor of Leonard J. Arrington

The Case for the New Mormon History: Thomas G. Alexander and His Critics

History of Historians: Mormons and Their Historians by Davis Bitton and Leonard J. Arrington

History for the People: Utah: A People’s History by Dean May

On the Edge of Solipsism: The Edge of the Reservoir by Larry E. Morris

A Double Dose of Revisionism: The 1838 Mormon War in Missouri

Latter-day Saints, Lawyers, and the Legal Process: Zion in the Courts

Twin Contributions: Establishing Zion: The Mormon Church in the American West, 1847-1869 by Eugene E. Campbell

Mormondom’s Second Greatest King: King of Beaver Island: The Life and Assassination of James Jesse Strang by Roger Van Noord

Living the Principle: Mormon Polygamous Families: Life in the Principle by Jessie L. Embry

Reply to “Forever Tentative”

Forever Tentative

Jews in the Columns of Joseph’s Times and Seasons

Hearkening Unto Other Voices: To Be Learned Is Good If… edited by Robert L. Millet

Passion Poems: How Much for the Earth? by Emma Lou Thayne

New Perspectives on Nineteenth-Century St. George: A Sermon in the Desert: Belief and Behavior in Early St. George, Utah

Mormon Splinter Groups: Recreating Utopia in the Desert: A Sectarian Challenge to Modern Mormonism by Hans A. Baer

“What Has Become of Our Fathers?” Baptism for the Dead at Nauvoo

Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 85–97
Chronicling the history  of baptizing for the dead during the Nauvoo Period, this article introduces the practice from the first baptizers to how it was altered after Joseph Smith’s death.

An Ambivalent Rejection: Baptism for the Dead and the Reorganized Church Experience

Dialogue 23.2 (1990): 61–83

Launius shares how the Reorganized Church has changed their stance on baptisms for the dead.

Fundamentalist Attitudes Toward the Church: The Sermons of Leroy S. Johnson

Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 39–60
Driggs shares what an early fundamentalist leader by the name of Leory S. Johnson taught about the church and polygamy.

The Women of Fundamentalism: Short Creek, 1953

Dialogue 23.2 (Summer 1990): 15–38
Bradley describes how even after the Short Creek Raids happened, the women there still believed in plural marriage.

Nothing New Under the Sun: New Religions and the Theological Imagination in America by Mary Farrell Bednarowski

Religious Themes in American Culture: Illusions of Innocence: Protestantism in America, 1630-1875

Plight and Promise: Windows on the Sea and Other Stories by Linda Sillitoe

Kimball’s Diaries: On the Potter’s Wheel: The Diaries of Heber C. Kimball edited by Stanley B. Kimball

Strange Love: The School of Love by Phillis Barber

A Reasonable Approach to History and Faith: History and Faith: Reflections of a Mormon Historian by Richard D. Poll

“A Profound Sense of Community”: Mormon Values in Wallace Stegner’s Recapitulation

The Temple in Zion: A Reorganized Perspective on a Latter Day Saint Institution

Dialogue 24.1 (Spring 1991): 86–98
In preparation for the Independence Temple that was dedicated in 1994, an RLDS member shares ideas about temples in general.

The Development of the Mormon Concept of Grace

“All Alone and None to Cheer Me”: The Soughern States Mission Diary of J. Golden Kimball

Speaking in Tongues in the Restoration Churches

Dialogue 24.1 (Spring 1991): 13–35
However, during the mid-1800s, speaking in tongues was so commonplace in the LDS and RLDS churches that a person who had not spoken  in tongues, or who had not heard others do so, was a rarity.

The Paradox of Paradox: Strangers in Paradox: Explorations in Mormon Theology by Margaret and Paul Toscano

Affidavits Revisited: Joseph Smith’s New York Reputation Reexamined by Rodger I. Anderson

Scripture in the Reorganization: Exegesis, Authority, and the “Prophetic Mantle”

Dale Morgan, Writer’s Project, and Mormon History as a Regional Study

The Eastern Edge: LDS Missionary Work in Hungarian Lands

A Teenager’s Mormon Battalion Journal: The Gold Rush Diary of Azariah Smith edited by David L. Bigler

A New Synthesis: Exiles in a Land of Liberty: Mormons in America, 1830-1846 by Kenneth H. Winn

Mormonism’s First Theologian: The Essential Parley P. Pratt foreword by Peter L. Crawley

Utah’s Original “”Mr. Republican””: Reed Smoot: Apostle in Politics by Milton R. Merrill

A Poetic Legacy: The Owl on the Aerial by Clarice Short

Clawson and the Mormon Experience: The Making of a Mormon Apostle: The Story of Rudger Clawson

Delusion as an Exceedingly Fine Art: Bones by Franklin Fisher

Two Covenant Systems: Promises Made to the Father: Mormon Covenant Organization by Rex Eugene Cooper

A Song Worth Singing: Mormonism and Music: A History by Michael Hicks

Why Ane Wept: A Family History Fragment

The New Zealand Mission During the Great Depression: Reflections of a Former Acting President

A Mormon View of Life

Self-Blame and the Manifesto

Dialogue 24.3 (Fall 1991): 43–57
Before the Manifesto was first read in conference, members and church leaders fully believed in plural marriage as being a commandment from God. Once the Manifesto was read, over time members started wondering if it was because of their own actions that polygamy was no longer a commandment.

The Political Background of the Woodruff Manifesto

Dialogue 24.3 (Fall 1991): 21–39
Lyman discusses the political pressures from the United Government which led to the church issuing the First Manifesto.

“Almost Like Us”: The American Socialization of Australian Converts

My Ghosts

Is There Such a Thing as a “Moral War”?

The Moral Failures of Operation Desert Storm

The Thoughtful Patriot — 1991

The Building of Mormon History in Italy: Le nuove religioni, Le sette cristiane: Dai Testimoni di Geova al Reverendo Moon

“And They Shall Be One Flesh”: Sexuality and Contemporary Mormonism

Comments on the Theological and Philosophical Foundations of Christianity

On Becoming a Universal Church: Some Historical Perspectives

Dialogue 25.1 (Spring 1992): 13–36
A historical analysis of the globalization of the Church. Under President David O McKay, the Church was able to reach out to more people beyond North America and Europe, which led to an increase in membership, temples and missionaries.

Unnatural History: Refuge: An Unnatural History of Family and Place by Terry Tempest Williams

Wilford Woodruff and the Mormon Reformation of 1855-57

The Wake of a Media Crisis: Guilt by Association or Innocence by Proclamation?

A Closer Focus: Challenges in Doing Local History

Seeking the Past: Nobel Quest of Fool’s Errand: Faithful History: Essays on Writing Mormon History edited by George D. Smith

Is There a New Mormon History?: The New Mormon History: Revisionist Essays on the Past edited by D. Michael Quinn

Speaking for Themselves: LDS Ethnic Groups Oral History Project

Dialogue 25.4 (Winter 1992): 99–110
An oral history project on ethnic wards and branches.

Great Basin Kingdom Revisited

Telling It Slant: Aiming for Truth in Contemporary Mormon Literature

How Common the Principle? Women as Plural Wives in 1860

Dialogue 26.2 (Summer 1993): 139–153
A study done to see how many polygamous wives there were at the peak of polygamy in the church.

Each in Her Own Time: Four Zinas

B.H. Roberts’s Autobiography

The B.H. Roberts Papers at the University of Utah

Intellectuals in Mormon History: An Update

Apologetic and Critical Assumptions About Book of Mormon Historicity

Dialogue 26.3 (Summer 1995):163–180
FOR TRADITION-MINDED MEMBERS of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter￾day Saints the Book of Mormon’s historicity is a given: Book of Mormon events actually occurred and its ancient participants existed in ancient history

Watching

You Are Not Alone: A Plea for Understanding the Homosexual Condition

Dialogue 26.3 (Fall 1993): 119–140
In fall 1993, TJ O’Brian wrote, “You are Not Alone: A Please for Understanding the Homosexual Condition.” O’Brian was a gay man and this esay addresses how church members should treat LGBT members. He points to Jan Stout’s article among other influential pieces that were beginning to soften LDS attitudes and change practices in the early 90s. But he also notes several examples of terrible things that LDS members were still saying and doing, not including an imfamous homophobic rant from Orson Scott Card in Sunstone magazine in 1990.

Hannah Grover Hegsted and Post-Manifesto Plural Marriage

The Ordeal of Lowry Nelson and the Mis-spoken Word

B.H. Roberts’s Studies of the Book of Mormon

Remembering B.H. Roberts

Does Paying Tithing Make You a Voting Shareholder? BYU’s Worldwide Board of Trustees

Free Expression: The LDS Church and Brigham Young University

Patriarchal Blessings and the Routinization of Charisma

Telling the Tales and Telling the Truth: Writing the History of Widtsoe

The Mormon Struggle with Assimilation and Identity: Trends and Developments Since Midcentury

The “New Social History” and the “New Mormon History”: Reflections on Recent Trends

Dialogue 27.1 (Spring 1994): 109–123
My own analysis of the state of Mormon history suggests that the field, while other factors have also been at work, suffers from some of the exclusiveness and intellectual imperialism that were nurtured during the glory days of the “New Mormon History ” in the 1970s.

Intellect and Faith: The Controversy Over Revisionist Mormon History

Personality and Motivation in Utah Historiography

Nauvoo Roots of Mormon Polygamy, 1841-46: A Preliminary Demographic Report

Dialogue 27.1(Spring 1994): 1–72
Smith discusses the importance of plural marriage in Nauvoo to church history. He shows that after Joseph Smith passed away, Nauvoo polygamy numbers rose.

Memory and Familiarity: Voices from the Bottom of the Bowl: A Folk History of Teton Valley, Idaho, from 1823-1952

From Temple to Anti-Mormon: The Ambivalent Odyssey of Increase Van Dusen

Toward an Introduction to a Psychobiography of Joseph Smith

One Face of the Hero: In Search of the Mythological Joseph Smith

Dialogue 27.3 (Fall 1994): 233–247
Snow puts Joseph Smith squarely within Joseph Campbell’s famous work The Hero with a Thousand Faces, which is also known as the heroes journey.

The Locations of Joseph Smith’s Early Treasure Quests

Dialogue 27.3 (Fall 1994): 197–231

Vogel uses firsthand accounts of people’s reactions to Joseph Smith’s treasure digging.

Joseph Smith and Kabbalah: The Occult Connection

“Critical” Book of Mormon Scholarship: New Approaches to the Book of Mormon

Welfare as Warfare: The Mormons’ War on Poverty: A History of LDS Welfare, 1830-1990 by Garth L. Mangum and Bruce D. Blumell

“My Father’s Business””: Thomas Taylor and Mormon Frontier Economic Enterprise

A Granddaughter Remembers

The Noon of Life: Mid-Life Transition in the Married LDS Priesthood Holder

“Come Ye Disconsolate”: Is There a Mercy Seat in Mormon Theology and Practice?

The Law That Brings Life

Wallace Stegner: The Unwritten Letter

The Education of a BYU Professor

Sterling Moss McMurrin: A Philosopher in Action

“The Strange Mixture of Emotion and Intellect”: A Social History of Dale L. Morgan 1933-42

Mormon Static: Differing Visions: Dissenters in Mormon History edited by Roger D. Launius and Linda Thatcher

New Paradigms for Understanding Mormonism and Mormon History

Scripture, History, and Faith: A Round Table Discussion

How the History Is Told: My Best for the Kingdom: History and Autobiography of John Lowe Butler, A Mormon Frontiersman

Editing William Clayton and the Politics of Mormon History

Reflections on LDS Disbelief in the Book of Mormon as History

Dialogue 30.3 (Fall 1999):90–103
To average LDS church members in 1909, Roberts’s New Witnesses for God substantiated their beliefs and further embellished his stature for them as a historian and defender of the Book of Mormon. But only thirteen years later Roberts was to change his mind and that dramatically.

History

Quilts as Women’s History: Quilts and Women of the Mormon Migrations: Treasures of Transition

More Than Just a Battle for the Ballot: Battle for the Ballot: Essays on Woman Suffrage in Utah, 1870-1896

New York City Rain

Madeline McQuown, Dale Morgan, and the Great Unfinished Brigham Young Biography

Similar yet Different: How Wide the Divide? by Craig L. Blomberg and Stephen E. Robinson

Issues of Individual Freedoms: Friendly Fire: The ACLU in Utah by Linda Sillitoe

A Part of History Overlooked: Missing Stories: An Oral History of Ethnic and Minority Groups in Utah

Reflections on Mormon History: Zion and the Anti-Legal Tradition

Leonard J. Arrington: Reflections on a Humble Walk

Mormon Psychohistory: Psychological Insights into the Latter-day Saint Past, Present, and Future

A History of Dialogue, Part One: The Early Years, 1965-1971

Mission Complexities in Asia: From the East: The History of the Latter-day Saints in Asia, 1851-1996 by R. Lanier Britsch

Plural Marriage, Singular Lives: In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith by Todd Compton

A Welcome Arrival, A Promising Standard: The Pioneer Camp of the Saints

Making the Mormon Trek Come Alive: We’ll Find the Place: The Mormon Exodus, 1846-1848 by Richard E. Bennett

Mormonism and the Radical Religious Movement in Early Colonial New England

The Discovery of Native “Mormon” Communities in Russia

Busing to Kolob: Leaving the Fold: Candid Conversations with Inactive Mormons by James W. Ure

Good Book about the Good Book: An American Bible: A History of the Good Book in the United States, 1777-1880

One Well-Wrought Side of the Story: Sagwitch: Shoshone Chieftain, Mormon Elder, 1822-1887 by Scott R. Christensen

Missionary Roots of Change: What E’er Thou Art, Act Well Thy Part: The Missionary Diaries of David O McKay

The Life of a Controversial Biographer: Fawn McKay Brodie: A Biographer’s Life by Newell G. Bringhurst

Being Joseph Smith: The Sword of Laban: Joseph Smith, Jr., and the Dissociated Mind

A History of Dialogue, Part Two: Struggle Toward Maturity, 1971-1982

Protocols of the (Other) Elders of Zion: The History of the Saints, 3d edition, by John C. Bennett, ed. Andrew F. Smith

Finitism and the Problem of Evil

Mormonism and the Idea of Progress

Mormon Membership Trends in Europe Among People of Color: Present and Future Assessment

Preaching the Gospel of Church and Sex: Mormon Women’s Fiction in the Young Woman’s Journal, 1889-1910

Edward Tullidge and the Women of Mormondom

History of the Church — Part One

David O. McKay and the “Twin Sisters” Free Agency and Tolerance

The Search for Truth and Meaning in Mormon History

Mormonism’s Worldwide Aspirations and its Changing Conceptions of Race and Lineage

Root and Branch: An Abstract of the Structuralist Analysis of the Allegoryof the Olive Tree

History, Memory and Imagination in Virginia Eggertsen Sorensen’s Kingdom Come

An Other Mormon History: Hispanics in the Mormon Zion, 1912-1999 by Jorge Iber

A History of Dialogue, Part Three: The Utah Experience, 1982-1989

Lucy’s Own Voice: Lucy’s Book: A Critical Edition of Lucy Mack Smith’s Family Memoir

Book of Mormon Stories: Digging in Cumorah: Reclaiming Book of Mormon Narratives

Friendly History: Nauvoo: A Place of Peace, A People of Promise, by Glen M. Leonard

Critique of a Limited Geography for Book of Mormon Events

Dialogue 35.3 (Fall 2003):127–168
DURING THE PAST FEW DECADES, a number of LDS scholars have developed various “limited geography” models of where the events of the Book of Mormon occurred. These models contrast with the traditional western hemisphere model, which is still the most familiar to Book of Mormon readers.

Form Criticism of Joseph Smith’s 1823 Vision of the Angel Moroni

A Uniform and Common Recollection: Joseph Smith’s Legacy, Polygamy, and the Creation of Mormon Public Memory

Joseph Smith, the Book of Mormon, and the American Renaissance

Dialogue 35.3 (Fall 2003):9a–128
I am a literary critic who has spent a professional lifetime reading, teaching, and writing about literary texts. Much of my interest in and approach to the Book of Mormon lies with the text—though not just as a field for scholarly exploration.

Prophecy and Palimpsest

The Earliest Eternal Sealing for Civilly Married Couples Living and Dead

Martin Harris: The Kirtland Years, 1831-1870

A Patchwork Biography: Mormon Healer and Folk Poet: Mary Susannah Fowler’s Life of “Unselfish Usefulness”

Studies in Mormon History, 1830-1897

Prostitution, Polygamy and Power: Salt Lake City, 1847-1918, by Jeffrey Nichols

Blood of the Prophets: Brigham Young and the Massacre at Mountain Meadows, by Will Bagley

“Not Invite but Welcome”: The History and Impact of Church Policy on Sister Missionaries

All Abraham’s Children: Changing Mormon Conceptions of Race and Lineage, by Armand L. Mauss

Joseph Smith, by Robert V. Remini

A New Look at Old Sites on Mountain Meadows: Historical Topography, by Morris A. Shirts and Frances Anne Smeath

Power and Powerlessness: A Personal Perspective

The LDS Church and Community of Christ: Clearer Differences, Closer Friends

Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2003): 177–192
In this paper I will briefly discuss what I see as the six major differences between the two churches during the first century of their existence, and then I will look at eight new differences that have emerged over the past forty years or so. I make no claim that either is a complete list.

On Being Adopted: Julia Murdock Smith

Sidney Rigdon’s 1820 Ministry: Preparing the Way for Mormonism in Ohio

The Search for the Seed of Lehi: How Defining Alternative Models Helps in the Interpretation of Genetic Data

The Search for the Seed of Lehi: How Defining Alternative Models Helps in the Interpretation of Genetic Data

The Search for the Seed of Lehi: How Defining Alternative Models Helps in the Interpretation of Genetic Data

Simply Implausible: DNA and a Mesoamerican Setting for the Book of Mormon

Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2004):129–167
Instead of lending support to an Israelite origin as posited by Mormon scripture, genetic data have confirmed already existing archaeological, cultural, linguistic, and biological data, pointing to migrations from Asia as “the primary source of American In￾dian origins

A Biographer’s Burden: Evaluating Robert Remini’s Joseph Smith and Will Bagley’s Brigham Young

Joseph Smith in the Book of Mormon

Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2004):109–128
DID JOSEPH SMITH WRITE the Book of Mormon? To this over-familiar question the orthodox Latter-day Saint answer is a resounding “No” because the official belief is that a series of men with quasi-biblical names wrote the book over many centuries.

“There Really is a God and He Dwells in the Temporal Parietal Lobe of Joseph Smith’s Brain”

Scrying for the Lord: Magic, Mysticism, and the Origins of the Book of Mormon

Dialogue 36.4 (Winter 2004):109–128
JOSEPH SMITH GREW UP in a time and place where folk magic was an accepted part of the landscape. Before he was a prophet, he was a diviner, or more specif￾ically, a scryer who used his peepstone to discover the location of buried trea￾sure.

From Captain Kidd’s Treasure Ghost to the Angel Moroni: Changing Dramatis Personae in Early Mormonism

The Prophet’s Fall: A Note in Response to Lawrence Foster’s “The Psychology of Prophetic Charisma”

The Psychology of Prophetic Charisma

Wicks, Modems, and the Winds of War

A Tribute for Service Well Rendered

The Freiberg Temple: An Unexpected Legacy of a Communist State and a Faithful People

On April 23, 1983, a groundbreaking ceremony for the only temple of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints built behind the Iron Curtain was held in the city of Freiberg, in the German…

The Red Peril, the Candy Maker, and the Apostle: David O. McKay’s Confrontation with Communism

Living and Dying with Fallout

Utah Historians: Utah Historians and the Reconstruction of Western History by Gary Topping

Relief Society’s Golden Years: The Magazine

“Changing times Bring Changing Conditions”: Relief Society 1960 to the Present

What Does God Write in His Franklin Planner? The Paradoxes of Providence, Prophecy, and Petitionary Prayer

Mormons and the Omnis: The Dangers of Theological Speculation

Imprisonment, Defiance, and Division: The History of Mormon Fundamentalism in the 1940s and 1950s

Saving the Germans from Themselves?: In Search of the Supernal: Pre-Existence, Eternal Marriage, and Apotheosis in German Literary, Operatic, and Cinematic Texts by Alan Keele

Triptych-History of the Church

Women in a Time Warp: Discoveries: Two Centuries of Poems by Mormon Women, Edited by Sheree Maxwell Bench and Susan Elizabeth Howe

The Open Canon and Innovation: Conflict in the Quorum: Orson Pratt, Brigham Young, Joseph Smith by Gary James Bergera

Belief, Respect, and an Elbow to the Ribs: Believing History: Latter-day Saint Essayism by Richard Lyman Bushman

“He Was ‘Game'”: Joseph Smith: The Making of a Prophet by Dan Vogel

The First Piece in the Puzzle: Walking in the Sand: A History of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints in Ghana by Emmanuel Abu Kissi

The Weight of Priesthood

The Remnant Church: An RLDS Schismatic Group Finds a Prophet of Joseph’s Seed

Dialogue 38.3 (Fall 2005): 26–54
When the 1984 conference approved Section 156 , which also indicated that the soon-to-be-built temple in Independence would be dedicated to the pursuit of peace, it became clear that the largest “schism”—separation from the unity of the Church—in the history of the RLDS Church was in the making.

Identifying the Earliest Mormon Polygamists, 1841-1844

Dialogue 38.3 (Spring 2004): 1–74
Bergera uses evidence from plural wives to show who some of the first polygamists were in the church.

Tending the Desert: John A. Widtsoe: A Biography by Alan K. Parish

The Un-Hagiography: David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism by Gregory A. Prince and Wm. Robert Wright

A Scholarly Tribute to Leonard Arrington: The Collected Leonard J. Arrington Mormon History Lectures, Special Collections and Archives – Utah State University Libraries

A Trader and His Friends: Along Navajo Trails: Recollections of a Trader by Will Evans

A National Conspiracy?: Junius & Joseph: presidential Politics and the Assassination of the First Mormon Prophet by Robert S. Wicks and Fred R. Foister

A Forty-Year View: Dialogue and the Sober Lessons of History

The Death and Resurrection of the RLDS Zion: A Case Study in “Failed Prophecy” 1930-70

On Resurrection Sunday, April 1930, Bishop J. A. Koehler of the Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints attended a priesthood prayer meeting at the Stone Church RLDS congregation in Independence, Missouri.

A Novel with a Lot of Way-Out-There Ideas : D. Michael Martindale, Brother Brigham

Balancing Faith and Honesty : Segullah: Writings by Latter-day Saint Women

A Must-Read on Gender Politics : Martha Sonntag Bradley, Pedestals, Podiums: Utah Women, Religious Authority, and Equal Rights

Building “as Great a Temple as Ever Solomon Did” : Matthew McBrid A House for the Most High: The Story of the Original Nauvoo Temple

The Kind of Woman Future Historians Will Study : Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, Well-Behaved Women Seldom Make History

Innocent Hooligan : Douglas Thayer, Hooligan: A Morman Boyhood

Good Stories Told Well : A Survey of Mainstream Children’s Books by LDS Authors

Polygamy, Mormonism, and Me

Dialogue 41.2 (Summer 2009): 85–101
Hardy describes the long, difficult process of researching polygamy during a time that the church wasn’t open about polygamy.

“A New Future Requires a New Past”

My Madness

The Scholar as Celebrant : Terryl L. Givens, People of Paradox: A History of Mormon Culture

A History of Dialogue, Part Four: A Tale in Two Cities, 1987-92

Tribute to Levi S. Peterson

A Most Amazing Gift

Revelations from a Silent Angel

Not Your Parents’ Mormonism

The Remembering and Forgetting of Utah County’s Landmarks

Dixie Heart of Darkness

Mountain Meadows: Not Yet Gone

A Missive on Mountain Meadows

Roundtable on Massacre at Mountain Meadows

Time Tabled by Mormon History

The Beginnings of Latter-day Plurality Nauvoo Polygamy: “…but we called it celestial marriage.” by George D. Smith

Nauvoo Polygamy: The Latest Word Nauvoo Polygamy: “…but we called it celestial marriage.” by George D. Smith

Complete History of the Church

A Small History of Joseph Smith; Biography of Eugene England

Mordred Had a Good Point Gary Topping, Leonard J. Arrington: A Historian’s Life

Prophet, Seer, Revelator, American Icon Reid L. Neilson and Terryl L. Givens, eds., Joseph Smith Jr.: Reappraisals after Two Centuries

Formulas and Facts: A Response to John Gee

Dialogue 45.3 (Fall 2012): 1–10
In Winter 2010, Chris Smith and I published an article in Dialogue demonstrating that no more than ~56 cm of papyrus can be missing from the interior of the scroll of Hôr—the papyrus Joseph Smith identified as the Book of Abraham. John Gee has responded by claiming that our method is “anything but accurate” and that it “glaringly underestimates the length of the scroll.” He states that “Two different formulas have been published for estimating the original length of a scroll,” then attempts to show that “Hoffmann’s formula approximates the actual length of the papyrus,” whereas “Cook and Smith’s formula predicts a highly inaccurate length.” The fact is, the two formulas are completely equivalent. They are both exact expressions of an Archimedean spiral and they yield precisely the same results, if correctly applied.

Mormon Pulp with a Reading Group Guide David Ebershoff. The 19th Wife: A Novel

Twilight and Dawn: Turn-of-the-Century Mormonism Lu Ann Faylor Snyder and Phillip A. Snyder, eds. Post-Manifesto Polygamy: The 1899–1904 Correspondence of Helen, Owen, and Avery Woodruff

Response to Post-Manifesto Polygamy: The 1899–1904 Correspondence of Helen, Owen, and Avery Woodruff that contains letter correspondence between Apostle Owen Woodruff and his wives after Woodruff’s father issued the Manifesto.

Loving Truthfully Benedict XVI. Caritas in Veritate

Legacy of a Lesser-Known Apostle Edward Leo Lyman. Amasa Mason Lyman, Mormon Apostle and Apostate: A Study in Dedication

Mormon Women in the History of Second-Wave Feminism

Dialogue 43.2 (Fall 2010): 45–63
Reading these books in relation to my own life taught me something I should already have known. Mormon women weren’t passive recipients of the new feminism. We helped to create it.

In Lieu of History: Mormon Monuments and the Shaping of Memory

Finding the Presence in Mormon History: An Interview with Susanna Morrill, Richard Lyman Bushman,and Robert Orsi

Reid L. Neilson, Early Mormon Missionary Activities in Japan, 1901–1924

Patrick Q. Mason, The Mormon Menace: Violence and Anti-Mormonism in the Postbellum South

The Persistence of Mormon Plural Marriage

Review: Edward Leo Lyman, Candid Insights of a Mormon Apostle: The Diaries of Abraham H. Cannon, 1889–1895

Review: The Truth Will Set You Free Errol Morris, Tabloid

“There Is Always a Struggle”: An Interview with Chieko N. Okazaki

The Richard D. Poll and J. Kenneth Davies Cases: Politics and Religion at BYU during the Wilkinson Years

Mapping Manifest Destiny: Lucile Cannon Bennion (1891–1966)

Home and Adventure: An LDS Contribution to the Virtues and Vices Tradition

Dear Diary: Joseph F. Smith’s Mission Journals Nathaniel R. Ricks, ed. “My Candid Opinion”: The Sandwich Island Diaries of Joseph F. Smith, 1856–1857

Errand Out of the Wilderness Matthew Bowman. The Mormon People: The Making of an American Faith

Making Visible the Hand of Ritual: Devery S. Anderson and Gary James Bergera, eds., Joseph Smith’s Quorum of the Anointed, 1842–1845: A Documentary History; Devery S. Anderson and Gary James Bergera, eds., The Nauvoo Endowment Companies, 1845–1846: A Docu

Mormon Authoritarianism and American Pluralism

Review: Terryl L. Givens, Matthew J. Grow Parley P. Pratt: The Apostle Paul of Mormonism

Mormon History Association Conference: Comment on “Conversion in 19th Century Mormonism: Identities and Associations in the Atlantic World”

Mormon History Association Conference: The Theology of a Career Convert: Edward Tullidge’s Evolving Identities

Mormon History Association Conference: To Forsake Thy Father and Mother: Mary Fielding Smith and the Familial Politics of Conversion

UVU Mormon Studies Conference: Mormon Blogs, Mormon Studies, and the Mormon Mind

Conference Report: Editor’s Introduction

Review: Hugh J. Cannon. To the Peripheries of Mormondom. Edited by Reid Neilson

Review: Kim Östman. The Introduction of Mormonism to Finnish Society, 1840–1900

Reviews: Dean C. Jessee, Mark Ashurst-McGee, and Richard L. Jensen, eds. Journals, Volume 1: 1832–1839Dean C. Jessee, Mark Ashurst-McGee, and Richard L. Jensen, eds. Journals, Volume 2: December 1841–April 1843

“And Now It Is the Mormons”: The Magazine Crusade against the Mormon Church, 1910–1911

Our Bickering Founding Fathers and Their Messy, Flawed, Divinely Inspired Constitution

Review: Reid L. Neilson, ed. In the Whirlpool: The Pre-Manifesto Letters of President Wilford Woodruff to the William Atkin Family, 1885–1890

Review: Brock Cheney. Plain but Wholesome: Foodways of the Mormon Pioneers

Review: J. Spencer Fluhman. “A Peculiar People”:Anti-Mormonism and the Making of Religion in Nineteenth-Century America

Review: Edward J. Blum and Paul Harvey, The Color of Christ: The Son of God and the Saga of Race in America

“My Principality on Earth Began”: Millennialism and the Celestial Kingdom in the Development of Mormon Doctrine

“The Highest Class of Adulterers and Whoremongers”: Plural Marriage, the Church of Jesus Christ (Cutlerite), and the Construction of Memory

Dialogue 46.2 (Spring 2016): 1–39
Blythe shows the denial among Culterites followers that the founder was involved in plural marriage.

Review: Patrick Q. Mason, J. David Pulsipher, and Richard L. Bushman, eds. War and Peace in Our Time: Mormon Perspectives

Review: Robert S. McPherson, Jim Dandy, and Sarah E. Burak. Navajo Tradition, Mormon Life: The Autobiography and Teachings of Jim Dandy

Review: Irene M. Bates and E. Gary Smith. Lost Legacy: The Mormon Office of the Presiding Patriarch H. Michael Marquardt, ed. Early Patriarchal Blessings of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints H. Michael Marquardt, ed. Later Patriarchal Blessi

The Kirtland Temple as a Shared Space: A Conversation with David J. Howlett

Dialogue 47.1 (Spring 2014): 104–123
An oral interview between an LDS Member and a Community of Christ member regarding the history of the Kirtland Temple. They explain that despite differences in religious beliefs, people can still form friendships and cooperate.

Review: Stephen H. Webb. Mormon Christianity: What Other Christians Can Learn from the Latter-day Saints

Dialoguing Online: The Best of 10+ Years of Mormons Blogging

A Swelling Tide: Nineteen-Year-Old Sister Missionaries in the Twenty-First Century

Mormon Feminism: The Next Forty Years

Dialogue 47.4 (Winter 2014): 167–180
Brooks talks about the period from 1970s Mormon feminism in Boston to the present and imagines what needs to be part of the future. She identifies five areas for Mormon feminism: theology, institutions, racial inclusion, financial independence, and spiritual independence.

Review: Full Lives but Not Fulfilling Paula Kelly Harline. The Polygamous Wives Writing Club: From the Diaries of Mormon Pioneer Women

The Present, Past, and Future of LDS Financial Transparency

Review: Confident Interpretations of Silence David Conley Nelson. Moroni and the Swastika: Mormons in Nazi Germany

The Last Memory: Joseph F. Smith and Lieux de Mémoire in Late Nineteenth-Century Mormonism