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  • Cornucopia

    Times and Seasons Welcomes Paul Reeve

    Russell Arben Fox

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    December 3, 2007

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    9 responses

    It has no doubt been noticed–for those that care about the deep red-blue rivalries of Utah, anyway–that Times and Seasons does pretty well when it comes to drawing upon the Cougars insofar as perma- and guest-bloggers are concerned, but until this point, our track record with the Utes has been lacking. With arrival of Paul Reeve, an assistant professor of history at the University of Utah, as a guestblogger for the next little while, we hope to turn that record around. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Terryl Givens: The Scholar as Celebrant

    Nate Oman

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    November 30, 2007

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    14 responses

    Terryl Givens is doing a great deal in People of Paradox. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Reflections on People of Paradox by the Author

    Ben Huff

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    November 28, 2007

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    26 responses

    Terryl Givens was kind enough to share some reflections on his book, People of Paradox: A History of Mormon Culture, in response to our questions. His answers follow, in italics. Read More

  • Cornucopia, Life in the Church, Missionary

    Watching conference

    Wilfried Decoo

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    November 28, 2007

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    34 responses

    Stake conference in the mission field. Still the mission field, for although we are a stake, there is no stake center, only a chapel in some of the main cities, and rented rowhouses elsewhere. The stake covers some 10,000 square miles. Therefore we gather in this huge, sparsely lit movie theatre—theatre number 14 in a massive cinema complex close to the highway. Read More

  • Cornucopia, Latter-day Saint Thought

    Another Conference on Mormons

    Jim F.

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    November 27, 2007

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    6 responses

    Call for Papers: “Interpretation: LDS Perspectives” Sponsored by Mormon Scholars in the Humanities and Mormon Scholars Foundation Read More

  • Cornucopia, Latter-day Saint Thought, News and Politics

    Graduate Student Conference at Claremont: Call for Papers — CHANGE!

    Jim F.

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    November 27, 2007

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    “May These Principles Be Established”: Mormonism in the Political Arena Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The Wonder of a New Religous Art Tradition

    Richard Oman

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    November 27, 2007

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    29 responses

    Terryl Givens and Richard Bushman share a common pattern of scholarship. Both seek to put the Mormon experience into a broad cultural and historical framework. Both seek engage us by bringing Mormon history into dialogue with the broader history of our shared civilization. This is part of an encouraging direction in serious Mormon scholarship that seems to be moving beyond myopic focus of endless chronicles. Givens’ work had the added benefit of good prose that is actually fun to read. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Tracing Emily (updated)

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    November 27, 2007

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    22 responses

    This story begins at the bitter end, with suicide in a Butte brothel. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Givens’ Winter Wheat

    Rosalynde Welch

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    November 26, 2007

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    17 responses

    His fruitful new study provides lots to chew on this winter. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    People of Paradox Symposium

    Ben Huff

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    November 26, 2007

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    8 responses

    Terryl Givens’ new book, People of Paradox, provocatively explores how distinctive features of Mormon faith are expressed in Mormon culture. Times and Seasons has decided to hold a symposium to review it, and to take up the conversation it begins. The symposium will include Read More

  • Cornucopia, Latter-day Saint Thought, News and Politics

    Grad Student Conference: Mormonism in Politics

    Jim F.

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    November 23, 2007

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    7 responses

    Graduate Student Conference at Claremont: Call for Papers “May These Principles Be Established”: Mormonism in the Political Arena Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Mission Thanksgiving Meals

    Blog Administration

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    November 22, 2007

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    39 responses

    Here’s a post for your afternoon stupor. What were your mission Thanksgiving meals like? Tell us in the comments. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Turkey: The Poll

    Kaimi Wenger

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    November 21, 2007

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    37 responses

    What’s going to be on your plate tomorrow? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Brothers in Arms

    Russell Arben Fox

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    November 21, 2007

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    35 responses

    Today, my older brother, James Daniel Fox, turns 40. That’s right: 40. Forty! Which means I’m thirty-nine, and that’s plain crazy. Something has gone dreadfully wrong, I know it. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Book Review: People of Paradox: A History of Mormon Culture

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 19, 2007

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    14 responses

    People of Paradox is unusual: Givens sets out four major paradoxes in Mormon thought and then shows how various aspects of Mormon culture (the life of the mind, architecture, visual art, dance, film, etc.), at various moments in history, negotiate those dilemmas. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Blogging, Church Doctrine, and the Limits of Authority

    Nate Oman

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    November 19, 2007

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    40 responses

    People frequently claim that Mormonism is an essentially atheological religion. It is not always exactly clear what is meant by this statement, but it generally seems to me something like we place right practice and sacred stories at the center of our faith rather than an abstract set of propositions. Whatever the merits of this claim, I think that it is hard to deny that the concept of “church doctrine” is enormously important within the church discussions. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Sorting voices from the dust

    Jonathan Green

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    November 19, 2007

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    17 responses

    When we read the Book of Mormon, whose voice do we think we are hearing? Trying to answer that question, I think, is one of the essential moves in a Mormon mode of interpretation. Consider, for example, 2 Nephi 2:17, where Lehi pauses to speculate on Lucifer’s origins: Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Three Statements

    Kaimi Wenger

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    November 18, 2007

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    111 responses

    In 2004, the church issued True to the Faith, a First Presidency-approved booklet discussing many points of church doctrine. The booklet includes a discussion of birth control. How does that official, First Presidency-approved discussion compare to both President Beck’s recent talk on Mothers Who Know, and to the anti-Beck statement at the What Women Know website? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Replenish the earth

    Kaimi Wenger

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    November 17, 2007

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    37 responses

    Is “multiply and replenish the earth” one commandment, or two? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Children Are Not Optional

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 16, 2007

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    185 responses

    Several women I know and like recently signed on to an anti-President-Beck’s-talk statement. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    The Joy of God

    Matt Evans

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    November 16, 2007

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    21 responses

    In Moses 7, Enoch sees God weep because of the wickedness and suffering of his children. When does God’s weeping end? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Wackiest attempted priestcraft, Google version

    Kaimi Wenger

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    November 15, 2007

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    12 responses

    Check out these wacky ads, straight off of today’s Gmail sidebar. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Random Thoughts on the Princeton Conference

    Russell Arben Fox

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    November 15, 2007

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    15 responses

    The recent conference on Mormonism and American Politics at Princeton University, organized by former Times and Seasons blogger Melissa Proctor, was–from the perspective of this participant at least–a resounding success: plenty of exchanges, ideas, and arguments, some presented formally through papers and many others emerging informally through conversations after and between sessions, all packed into a little more than a single cold, grey Saturday in New Jersey. Reports on the conference are already making the rounds (see Matt B.’s excellent summary here, for example); those seriously obsessed with Mormon studies will be happy to here that the entire conference was… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Did Laurel Thatcher Ulrich sell out?

    Rosalynde Welch

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    November 15, 2007

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    70 responses

    How an obscure academic article yielded marketing gold. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Going Long: Of Clubs and Conduct

    Ardis E. Parshall

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    November 14, 2007

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    37 responses

    John Varah Long was cited to appear before church officials in 1866 for, among other reasons, “belonging to the young men’s social club, and other conduct unbecoming a saint.” Is it possible that the social club, one cause of Long’s excommunication, was also a model for the church’s Mutual Improvement Associations? Read More

  • Cornucopia

    After this manner

    Kaimi Wenger

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    November 13, 2007

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    33 responses

    After this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Out of the Intellectual (and Electronic) Ghetto!

    Nate Oman

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    November 12, 2007

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    20 responses

    I have long thought that there ought to be an online clearing house for research papers related to Mormonism. My proposed model is SSRN, the Social Science Research Network, where scholars in law, economics, and other disciplines upload copies of working papers and published articles. Each article is accompanied by an abstract, and all of them become text searchable and available for downloading. (Scholars who either cannot or will not upload copies of their articles can still upload abstracts.) At present there are about 132,000 scholarly papers up on SSRN. Mormon studies, I have long thought, ought to have something… Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Publicizing Good Works

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 11, 2007

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    32 responses

    Go read this. Then return and report. Read More

  • Cornucopia

    A poem for leaf fall

    Rosalynde Welch

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    November 9, 2007

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    23 responses

    That time of year thou may’st in me behold Read More

  • Cornucopia

    Paradigms Lost and Found

    Julie M. Smith

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    November 9, 2007

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    49 responses

    Ben called my attention to this discussion. David Bokovoy, who is working on a PhD in Hebrew Bible at Brandeis and is the CES director in Boston, sets out this argument: Read More

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