Mormon Studies Review
Volume 1 | Number 1
Article 26
1-1-2014
Mormon Studies: A Bibliographic Essay
Blair Dee Hodges
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Hodges, Blair Dee (2014) "Mormon Studies: A Bibliographic Essay," Mormon Studies Review: Vol. 1 : No. 1 , Article 26.
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Hodges: Mormon Studies: A Bibliographic Essay
Mormon Studies: A Bibliographic Essay
Blair Dee Hodges
Introduction
MOST OVERVIEWS OF THE RISE OF MORMON STUDIES begin with the “New
Mormon History,” a title minted in 1969 to describe the increasing professionalization of historical scholarship about the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints.1 But by the 1960s, academic studies of Mormonism
had been under way for decades. Three years before Moses Rischin
coined the label “New Mormon History,” historian Leonard J. Arrington
chronicled the twentieth-century rise of “Mormon studies,” an academic
legacy that was not limited to history.2 Arrington showed that Mormon
studies was born in the context of academic professionalization in the
social sciences, economics, and what is now called cultural studies. NonMormons and Mormons alike had produced articles, dissertations, and
books at a variety of non-LDS universities prior to the establishment of
Mormon-centric institutions and journals like Brigham Young University
Studies (1959), the Mormon History Association (1965), Dialogue: A
Journal of Mormon Thought (1965), Exponent II (1974), and the Journal
of Mormon History (1974). Arrington demonstrated that the New Mormon History was actually a latecomer to the Mormon studies party. Even
so, history came to dominate mid-century approaches to Mormonism.
1. Moses Rischin, “The New Mormon History,” American West 6 (March 1969): 49.
2. Leonard J. Arrington, “Scholarly Studies of Mormonism in the Twentieth Century,”
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 1/1 (1966): 15–32.
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In 2002, a spotlight on “Latter-day Studies” in the Chronicle of Higher
Education acknowledged the centrality of history in Mormon studies
while recognizing that the field included “not just specialists in American
studies or religious history, but social scientists and cultural theorists as
well.”3 History still dominates, but Mormon studies has developed into
an interdisciplinary field consisting of scholars, publications, university
courses, and endowed professorships from a wider variety of academic
disciplines.
Arrington’s 1966 article identified a number of considerations that
are still being debated, including the problem of insider-versus-outsider
perspectives, the necessity of interdisciplinary research, and the constraints placed upon research by religious institutions as well as the academy. Arrington concludes: “Perhaps eventually a Mormon Yearbook can
be published that will contribute to the elevation of Mormon studies.”4
Arrington believed such a publication could result in “edification and
cultural advancement” by “promot[ing] research and writing which will
give the Mormon heritage a fuller and more sympathetic hearing.”5 Arrington called for something akin to Gustav von Schmoller’s social science–focused publication Jahrbuch, which differs in scope from the
Mormon Studies Review but shares the goal of evaluating, chronicling,
and promoting the best academic research.
Given the diversity of academic approaches to Mormonism, perhaps
the only consensus in Mormon studies is the acknowledgment that the
field is without a unified vision of what it is and where it is headed. This
essay calls attention to the most prominent published discussions of the
“what, who, where, and how” of Mormon studies. This bibliographic assessment is not intended to be comprehensive or prescriptive; rather, it
aims to highlight various questions, problems, and possibilities facing
those interested in academic engagement with Mormon studies.
3. Scott McLemee, “Latter-day Studies: Scholars of Mormonism Confront the History
of What Some Call ‘The Next World Religion,’” Chronicle of Higher Education, 22 March
2002, A14–16, http://chronicle.com/article/Latter-day-Studies/29405.
4. Arrington, “Scholarly Studies,” 28.
5. Arrington, “Scholarly Studies,” 28.
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Questions, problems, possibilities
Historians dominated Mormon studies during the second half of the
twentieth century and periodically paused to assess the field’s direction,
noting along the way the changes that have flowered in the new century.6
As the New Mormon History has given way to a “New, New Mormon
History,” a number of scholars have evaluated past efforts with an eye to
improving future scholarship. Grant Underwood’s “Re-visioning Mormon History” (1986) 7 praised the “explosion of Mormon history” that
followed Arrington’s 1966 essay, but he saw the need for historians to better adhere to “methodological trends in the broader historical profession.” Doing so would help “correct the institutional bias and refine the
monolithic interpretations” that had informed the New Mormon
History.8 For instance, Underwood prompted scholars to pay attention
to regional differences and internal diversity in order to depict the “kaleidoscopic pattern of Mormonisms,”9 adding that special attention should
be paid to the contexts in which these Mormonisms developed in order
to analyze the ways that wider culture informed, and was being informed
by, Mormons. Underwood’s calls have been repeated to the present, suggesting that the field has long had a sense of what is needed but has remained in some ways locked in traditional patterns.
Jan Shipps and Richard Bushman’s 2007 exchange in the Journal of
American History also connected the New Mormon History to more recent developments in Mormon studies. Shipps reviewed Bushman’s 2005
biography Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling, calling it “the crowning
achievement of the new Mormon history,”10 which is both a strength and
6. For a useful collection of essays on New Mormon History, see D. Michael Quinn,
ed., The New Mormon History: Revisionist Essays on the Past (Salt Lake City: Signature
Books, 1992).
7. Grant Underwood, “Re-visioning Mormon History,” The Pacific Historical Review
55/3 (August 1986): 403–26.
8. Underwood, “Re-visioning Mormon History,” 404.
9. Underwood, “Re-visioning Mormon History,” 420, emphasis in original.
10. Jan Shipps, “Richard Bushman, the Story of Joseph Smith and Mormonism, and
the New Mormon History,” Journal of American History 94 (September 2007): 498–516.
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a drawback of the book. She detailed Bushman’s strategy of presenting supernatural elements of the Mormon experience straightforwardly as the
participants themselves—believers and unbelievers alike—described
them.11 While Shipps argued that Bushman’s biography devotes too much
space to addressing problems chiefly of importance to apologists and critics, she predicted that current and future graduate students would follow
Bushman’s lead by continuing to “leave the provinciality that made so
much old Mormon history inward looking.”12 Bushman had at least partially succeeded at discussing Mormonism in a way that was less polarizing for Mormons and non-Mormons, although he could not appeal to all.
Bushman responded that apologists, critics, and scholars would continue
to scrutinize accounts of Mormon origins. He added the proviso that such
conversations should integrate the Mormon experience into the wider
American experience with special attention to tone: “We will write better
if we are less defensive, more open to criticism, more exploratory and venturous, but even with our inhibitions and parochialisms, we should come
to the table with our Mormonism intact.”13 He argued against a univocal
view of Joseph Smith, called for greater inclusion of Mormon and nonMormon voices, and invited further “inquiry from many angles.”14
While Shipps was not uncritical of Bushman’s work, her review did
not offer prescriptions for an ailing patient. Rather, and in harmony with
Bushman, she pointed to the vitality of Mormon studies. Their exchange
sparked a roundtable discussion in the Journal of Mormon History: “What
Will We Do Now That New Mormon History Is Old” (2009).15 Organizer
Keith A. Erekson described the ten-member roundtable, consisting of
11. This method of including the miraculous in historical accounts without either demanding readers’ acceptance or evoking their disdain is discussed further in Matthew
Bowman, “Finding the Presence in Mormon History: An Interview with Susanna Morrill,
Richard Lyman Bushman, and Robert Orsi,” Dialogue 44/3 (Fall 2011): 174–87.
12. Shipps, “New Mormon History,” 514, 516.
13. Richard L. Bushman, “What’s New in Mormon History: A Response to Jan Shipps,”
Journal of American History 94 (September 2007): 517–21.
14. Bushman, “Response to Jan Shipps,” 521.
15. Keith A. Erekson et al., “What Will We Do Now That New Mormon History Is
Old: A Roundtable,” Journal of Mormon History 35/3 (2009): 190–233.
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PhD students and early-career academics, as a “polyphonic expression
of a collective research agenda.”16 Among other topics, participants called
for greater inclusion of Joseph Smith–inspired religious movements beyond the Salt Lake–based church; stressed the importance of utilizing
Mormonism to inform wider American and international histories, politics, and culture; and invited scholars to push “Mormon historical scholarship in new interdisciplinary, transnational, temporal, comparative,
and theoretical directions.”17
Repeated calls for interdisciplinarity continued to bear fruit. In a second roundtable published in the Journal of Mormon History, six young
scholars discussed the topic “New Ways In: Writing Interdisciplinary
Mormon History” (2012).18 They called for more studies focused on
Mormon women and children, who often play second fiddle to male hierarchical figures. They also noted that Mormon liturgy is ripe for analysis; that literary studies offer a host of insights for a massive body of
Mormon fiction, history, and autobiography; and that “lived religion”
(the symbolic and material dimensions of faith) offers avenues ripe for
inquiry. Both roundtables—still dominated by historians—nevertheless
provide a sample of rich research possibilities and hint that a generation
of scholars is poised to answer the long-standing appeals for expansion
and diversity.
The articles discussed thus far have focused more on the “what” and
“how” more than the “who” or “where” of Mormon studies. With regard
to “who,” Joanna Brooks locked on to the long-standing insider/outsider
problem in her “Prolegomena to Any Future Mormon Studies” (1997).
Brooks wrote explicitly from the perspective of a Mormon scholar who
sensed some suspicion from the wider academy about Mormon participation.19 She described tensions resulting from the perception among
16. Erekson et al., “What Will We Do,” 191.
17. Erekson et al., “What Will We Do,” 223.
18. Rachel Cope et al., “New Ways In: Writing Interdisciplinary Mormon History”
Journal of Mormon History 38/2 (Spring 2012): 99–144.
19. Joanna Brooks, “Prolegomena to Any Future Mormon Studies,” Dialogue 30/1
(1997): 125–39.
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some cosmopolitan circles in the academy that Mormonism entails
provincialism. She discouraged Mormon scholars from watering down
the Mormon side of things in order to achieve academic respectability,
but she also warned against the tendency of some Mormon scholars
to play the role of orthodoxy police within the faith: “Collectively and
critically examining Mormon culture and staking exclusive claims to
‘Mormon-ness’ are two very different academic enterprises. From one
emerges a vital school of thought in Zion, while the other marks turf
in Provo [Utah, the location of Brigham Young University].”20 Brooks
promoted activist-oriented approaches to Mormon studies by inviting
Mormon scholars to “step out of your ivory tower and put your shoulder to the wheel,” to see what critiques Mormon beliefs and practices
might bring to bear on wider cultural contexts, as well as what wider
cultural contexts might have to offer Mormonism in return.21 She spent
little time discussing what role non-Mormon scholars might play in
Mormon studies, however. Non-Mormon Massimo Introvigne approaches the insider/outsider problem by critiquing the work of Terryl
Givens, one of the most prolific Mormon scholars, in “LDS Apologetics
from Oxford?” (2002).22 Introvigne called for continued resistance
against demands for scholars to adjudicate truth claims and supernatural occurrences. He argued that most scholars are more interested in
questions about the “meaning, historical function, and consequences”
of elements of Mormon belief than in arguing about whether golden
plates really existed.
Two book-length treatments also address insider/outsider dynamics.
In the first, Sojourner in the Promised Land (2000), Jan Shipps combined
20. Brooks, “Prolegomena,” 139.
21. Brooks, “Prolegomena,” 136. Richard Bushman has made similar calls for Mormon
scholars to make use of Mormonism to critique modern culture and thought. See Richard
L. Bushman, “On Being Ill at Ease in the World,” SquareTwo 2, no. 2 (Summer 2009),
http://squaretwo.org/Sq2ArticleBushmanIllAtEase.html, accessed August 15, 2013.
22. Massimo Introvigne, “LDS Apologetics from Oxford?,” Sunstone (July 2002): 58–
59.
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her experiences as a self-described “insider-outsider” to Mormonism
with an overview of Mormon history.23 Philip Barlow evaluated Shipps’s
careful inside/outsider methodology in “Jan Shipps and the Mainstreaming of Mormon Studies” (2004). Shipps’s approach requires the researcher
to engage sympathetically with Mormonism in order to analyze and describe it, but not to authenticate or debunk its revelations, or to try to
change it.24 This method resonates with Introvigne’s suggested approach.
It also bears similarity to Bushman’s, with an important difference. Bushman has also argued that Mormons should come to the table with their
Mormonism intact, ready to use Mormonism to critique other perspectives in certain projects. This aspect of his approach is closer to Brooks’s
prescription. The second book-length treatment on the insider/outsider
problem is Armand Mauss’s Shifting Borders and a Tattered Passport
(2012). Mauss’s memoir covered a similar time frame as Shipps’s, which
he narrates in order to explore tensions that Mormon academics like him
might encounter.25 Mauss is more direct about problems Mormon scholars might face if their work appears to be critical of the LDS Church.
Thus Mauss, Shipps, Introvigne, Bushman, and Brooks offer sympathetic
engagements with Mormonism, but they differ by degrees as to the appropriate levels of criticism that Mormon claims can leverage on wider
culture or that wider culture can bring to bear on Mormonism.
As the title of Barlow’s essay on Shipps suggests (“Jan Shipps and the
Mainstreaming of Mormon Studies”), he devoted much of his attention
to the cultural circumstances that contributed to Shipps’s popularity as
23. Jan Shipps, Sojourner in the Promised Land: Forty Years Among the Mormons (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 2000).
24. Philip Barlow, “Jan Shipps and the Mainstreaming of Mormon Studies,” Church
History 73/2 (June 2004): 412–26.
25. Armand L. Mauss, Shifting Borders and a Tattered Passport (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 2012). Mauss also chronicles the interesting and underused social
science literature on Mormonism in “Flowers, Weeds, and Thistles: The State of Social
Science Literature on the Mormons,” in the eminently useful Mormon History, ed. Ronald
W. Walker, David J. Whittaker, and James B. Allen (Urbana: University of Illinois Press,
2001), 153–98.
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an authority on Mormonism within and beyond the academy. Thus, Barlow’s essay is useful not only in its evaluation of Shipps and the
insider/outsider problem, but also in its attention to the wider cultural
changes that facilitated the rise of Mormon studies.26 As the twentieth
century turned to the twenty-first, Mormon studies played an increasingly prominent role in academic institutions in Utah and beyond. A
number of published articles have discussed these developments. Douglas J. Davies recounted the development of Mormon studies programs
and conferences during the late 1990s in “Mormon Studies in a European
Setting,” bringing the “where” of Mormon studies into the discussion.27
Davies called attention to some of the practical and political issues that
institutions must consider when becoming involved in Mormon studies.
For example, goodwill must be fostered in the religious community as
well as in the academic community in order to gain enough support to
sustain the scholarship. Such considerations are perhaps most salient in
Utah. Brian Birch discusses the difficulties of establishing courses in
Mormon studies at a public academic institution in Utah in “Between
Scylla and Charybdis: Championing Mormon Studies at Utah Valley
State College.”28 He offers perspective about why Mormon studies may
have been easier (but not necessarily easy) to institutionalize at a nonUtah school like Claremont Graduate University in California.
Thus, by the time the 2002 Winter Olympic Games arrived at the
doorstep of the LDS Church in Utah, the “what, who, where, and how”
26. Philip Barlow, “Jan Shipps and the Mainstreaming of Mormon Studies,” Church
History 73/2 (June 2004): 412–26.
27. Douglas J. Davies, “Mormon Studies in a European Setting,” Dialogue 34/3–4 (Fall,
Winter 2001): 1–8.
28. Brian Birch, “Between Scylla and Charybdis: Championing Mormon Studies at
Utah Valley State College,” Sunstone 121 (January 2002): 48–49. Eugene England, who
played a crucial role in promoting Mormon studies in Utah academic institutions, participated in two Sunstone Symposium panels on the subject. See Eugene England, “The
Academic Study of Religion: Prospects and Perils,” Salt Lake Sunstone Symposium, 3 August 2000; and “Calculated Risk: The Quest for Freedom and Diversity in Utah Higher
Education,” Salt Lake Sunstone Symposium, 4 August 2000. Audio recordings are available at http://www.eugeneengland.org/bibliography/video.
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of Mormon studies had been addressed in various publications. Within
the next several years, more university programs and endowed Mormon
studies chairs would appear. It was an opportune time for Loyd Ericson,
a graduate student at Claremont Graduate University, to offer one of the
more systematic portraits of the state of Mormon studies in his article
“Where Is the ‘Mormon’ in Mormon Studies?” (2011).29 Ericson painted
an inclusive portrait of Mormon studies that included critics, apologists,
non-Mormons, and Mormons. Claremont had established a chair in
Mormon studies in 2008 and began publishing the Claremont Mormon
Studies Newsletter in fall 2009, providing an institutional context in which
Ericson could survey the field. The University of Utah’s Tanner Humanities Center began publishing its Mormon Studies Newsletter in fall 2011.30
The former includes reflective articles on Mormon studies by students
and faculty alongside news and event notifications, while the latter is
used to announce lectures, classes, and other Mormon studies events at
the University of Utah. Both publications continue to be good resources
for announcing conferences and other Mormon studies events.
The most comprehensive overview of recent institutional developments in Mormon studies through 2007 is M. Gerald Bradford’s “The
Study of Mormonism: A Growing Interest in Academia.”31 As Bradford
noted, a number of theses and dissertations dealing with Mormon topics
were published in the past decade. Two in particular deal directly with
Mormon studies. John-Charles Duffy’s “Faithful Scholarship: The Mainstreaming of Mormon Studies and the Politics of Insider Discourse” (2006)
related a history of the rise of academic studies of Mormonism within the
LDS Church. By outlining some of the fault lines between apologists and
29. Loyd Ericson, “Where Is the ‘Mormon’ in Mormon Studies?,” Claremont Journal
of Mormon Studies 1/1 (April 2011): 5–13. Although Mormon studies continues apace
at Claremont, the journal is defunct.
30. See the Claremont Mormon Studies Newsletter at http://claremontmormonstudies
.org/newsletter.html and the University of Utah’s Mormon Studies Newsletter at
http://thc.utah.edu.
31. M. Gerald Bradford, “The Study of Mormonism: A Growing Interest in Academia,”
FARMS Review 19/1 (2007): 119–74.
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revisionist-minded Mormons, Duffy highlighted insider/insider problems
as much as insider/outsider problems. He proposed that Mormon studies
be viewed as a “contact zone” in which a number of parties with competing or sometimes complementary interests can examine Mormonism
from a variety of academic and religious perspectives.32
Ronald G. Helfrich Jr.’s “Idols of the Tribes: An Intellectual and Critical History of 19th and 20th Century Mormon Studies” analyzed how
the professionalization of various academic fields has contributed to the
present state of Mormon studies.33 He argued that scholars and intellectuals have not entirely avoided the polemical edge that has characterized
apologetic defenses and critical attacks of Mormonism. To Helfrich, academic studies tend to take at least an implicit stand on the reality of
Mormon claims about revelation by attributing the development of the
LDS Church to demographic, psychological, economic, political, and cultural forces. He concluded that scholars should remain humble in their
conclusions by recognizing the potential reductionism at the heart of any
academic approach.
Finally, two Mormon studies “readers,” or anthologies of essays, have
been published: Dimensions of Faith, edited by Stephen C. Taysom (2011),
and New Perspectives in Mormon Studies, edited by Quincy D. Newell and
Eric F. Mason (2013).34 In contrast to popular Catholic studies and Jewish
studies readers,35 these Mormon studies readers devote little space to dis-
32. John-Charles Duffy, “Faithful Scholarship: The Mainstreaming of Mormon Studies and the Politics of Insider Discourse” (master’s thesis, University of North Carolina
at Chapel Hill, 2006).
33. Ronald G. Helfrich Jr., “Idols of the Tribes: An Intellectual and Critical History of
19th and 20th Century Mormon Studies” (PhD diss., State University of New York at Albany, 2011).
34. Stephen C. Taysom, ed., Dimensions of Faith: A Mormon Studies Reader (Salt Lake
City: Signature Books, 2011); and Quincy D. Newell and Eric F. Mason, eds., New Perspectives in Mormon Studies: Creating and Crossing Boundaries (Norman: University of
Oklahoma Press, 2013).
35. See James T. Fisher and Margaret M. McGuinness, eds., The Catholic Studies Reader
(New York: Fordham University Press, 2011); and Andrew Bush, Jewish Studies: A Theoretical Discussion (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2011).
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cussing the development of the field or to considering theoretical or
methodological questions. Taysom and Newell describe their collections
as exemplary offerings of already-in-progress Mormon studies.36 Two important essays in the final section of Newell and Mason’s collection more
directly address the relationship of the Mormon faith to the academy. Eric
F. Mason’s “The Saints and the Scrolls: LDS Engagement with Mainstream
Dead Sea Scrolls Scholarship and Its Implications” is one of the only published pieces directly engaging the question of how ancient studies fits
within Mormon studies.37 Richard Bushman’s “Commencement of Mormon Studies” concludes that while history will continue to attract significant attention in Mormon studies, a “new wave of Mormon studies” is
flowing from “all the humanities, the social sciences, and the arts” in an
increasing variety of publications, conferences, and institutions.38
Conclusion
Relatively few discussions about what constitutes Mormon studies have
been published to date. Most scholars appear to be more interested in
pursuing their academic projects than in participating in reflective discussions about the field and its methodologies. Nevertheless, the articles,
reviews, roundtables, and books included in this essay provide a sense
of the ongoing issues being debated and the direction of the overall field.
The LDS Church has also weighed in with positive remarks about Mormon studies, including an announcement on the church’s news site of
36. The Mormon studies readers are more similar to Norman Ravvin and Richard
Menkis, eds., The Canadian Jewish Studies Reader (Markham, Ontario: Red Deer Press,
2004), which presents articles about aspects of Canadian Judaism in order to call attention
to research possibilities that the already-established field of Jewish studies is underutilizing.
37. Eric F. Mason, “The Saints and the Scrolls: LDS Engagement with Mainstream Dead
Sea Scrolls Scholarship and Its Implications,” in Newell and Mason, New Perspectives, 169–
95. Philip Barlow’s recently republished Mormons and the Bible: The Place of the Latterday Saints in American Religion (New York: Oxford University Press, 2013) is another
untapped source of inspiration for much-needed research on Mormonism’s relationship
to scripture.
38. Richard L. Bushman, “Commencement of Mormon Studies,” in Newell and Mason,
New Perspectives, 209–10.
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the recently created Mormon studies chair at the University of Virginia.39
Matthew Bowman identified church-directed efforts like the Joseph
Smith Papers Project, as well as non-Mormon John Turner’s biography
of Brigham Young, both of which drew heavily on the church’s extensive
archival materials as being “signs of a new openness” to academic inquiry
by the LDS Church, which has helped fuel financial and academic support for Mormon studies.40Additionally, over the past decade, students
and scholars have taken to the blogosphere—or the “Bloggernacle” in
Mormondom—to raise concerns or offer descriptions and prescriptions
about the state of Mormon studies. A representative sample of online discussions is available at the Maxwell Institute Blog.41
Whether in print or online, discussions about the “what, who, where,
and how” of Mormon studies will undoubtedly continue to map and
shape Mormon studies while highlighting the stakes involved for scholars, students, and academic and religious institutions. As evidenced by
the androcentric and Eurocentric makeup of these representative discussions, more women’s and international voices are needed to contribute
to the ongoing explorations of the borders and intersections of Mormon
studies. Despite this relative homogeneity, the present essay also suggests
that Mormon studies is not a monolithic field. At present, Mormon studies is conducted among an informal community of scholars who bring a
variety of academic approaches to bear on Mormonism in order to better
understand the faith, and religion more generally, by attending to the
ways Mormonism informs—and is informed by—wider cultural, theological, and political contexts. The present state of Mormon studies portends a bright and vibrant future.
39. “‘Mormon Studies’ and the Value of Education,” http://www.mormonnewsroom.
org/article/mormon-studies-and-the-value-of-education, 2 November 2007; and “University Announces Endowed Chair in Mormon Studies,” http://www.lds.org/church/
news/university-announces-endowed-chair-in-mormon-studies, 6 December 2012.
40. Jennifer Schuessler, “The Mormon Lens on American History,” New York Times, 2
July 2012, http://www.nytimes.com/2012/07/03/books/mormon-studies-attract-morescholars-and-attention.html.
41. Blair Hodges, “A Mormon Studies Blogliography,” maxwellinstituteblog.org/a-mormon-studies-blogliography, 16 August 2013.
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Blair Dee Hodges is the public communications specialist at Brigham
Young University’s Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship.
He received a master’s degree in religious studies at Georgetown University after completing his thesis on intellectual disabilities in Mormon
thought and history, 1830–1900.
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