Item Detail
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17152
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3
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17
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English
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No Man Knows My Psychology : Fawn Brodie, Joseph Smith, and Psychoanalysis
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BYU Studies
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2005
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44
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no.1
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55-78
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This article examines Fawn Brodie's famous biography, No Man Knows my History, as well as other scholars' evaluations of her work. In particular, this article discusses Brodie's use of psychoanalysis in the 1945 edition and later in her supplement to the biography. The author posits that Brodie's initial approach to Joseph Smith was not psychological as some critics have claimed--her psychoanalytical approach to history and biography came later in her career.
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A Biography of the Biography : The Research and Writing of No Man Knows My History
Applause, Attack, and Ambivalence--Varied Responses to Fawn M. Brodie's No Man Knows My History
Fawn Brodie : The Woman and Her History
Fawn McKay Brodie : A Biographer's Life
Fawn McKay Brodie At the Intersection of Secularism and Personal Alienation
From Old to New Mormon History : Fawn Brodie and the Legacy of Scholarly Analysis of Mormonism
Inside the Mind of Joseph Smith : Psychobiography and the Book of Mormon
Joseph Smith and the Beginnings of Mormonism
Literary Style in No Man Knows My History : An Analysis
Mormons and Their Historians
No, Ma'am, That's Not History
No Man Knows My History : The Life of Joseph Smith, the Mormon Prophet
Reconsidering No Man Knows My History : Fawn M. Brodie and Joseph Smith in Retrospect
The Brodie Connection : Thomas Jefferson and Joseph Smith
The Psychology of Religious Genius : Joseph Smith and the Origins of New Religious Movements
The Quest for Religious Authority and the Rise of Mormonism
The Sword of Laban : Joseph Smith, Jr. and the Dissociated Mind