Item Detail
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16475
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11
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0
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English
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Crisis in Identity : Mormon Responses in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
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Mormonism and American Culture
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New York, NY
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Harper & Row
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168-84
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Fifty years ago Ephraim Ericksen warned that with the conquering of the Utah frontier Mormons faced the necessity of finding new goals and new programs if the church were to retain its vigor and relevance. Leonard Arrington details how the Mormons have dealt successfully with several "identity crises" in the past, and how today programs of great variety continue to absorbed the time and talent of its membership, thus providing a kind of relevance still meaningful to the Latter-day Saints. [Editors' summary]
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American Universities and the Birth of Modern Mormonism, 1867-1940
Becoming Mormon
From the Outside Looking In : Essays on Mormon History, Theology, and Culture
Leonard James Arrington (1917-1999) : A Bibliography
Mormon Intruders in Tonga : The Passport Act of 1922
Mormons Study "Abroad" : Brigham Young' Romance with American Higher Education, 1867-1877
The Mormon Experience : A History of the Latter-day Saints
'The Mormon Peril' : The Crusade against the Saints in Britain, 1910-1914
The Politics of American Religious Identity : The Seating of Senator Reed Smoot, Mormon Apostle
Toward a Social Science of Contemporary Mormondom
Western History Association Prize Recipient, 1984 : Leonard J. Arrington