Item Detail
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19424
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1
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12
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English
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Fawn Mckay Brodie and Joseph Smith : A Psychoanalytic Comparison
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John Whitmer Historical Association Journal
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2006
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26
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287-313
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Anderson writes a biography of Fawn M. Brodie, tracing her journey from believer to skeptic to apostate. He also traces her journey as an author. Her biographies were all about powerful men and their lives of deception and sex and all contained some autobiographical elements, especially her biography on Joseph Smith. Anderson states that this book, No Man Knows My History was "an attack on sexism and inequity, sustained by religious dishonesty" and the "deeper unanswerable question on how she felt being a woman."
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Applause, Attack, and Ambivalence--Varied Responses to Fawn M. Brodie's No Man Knows My History
Dale Morgan on Early Mormonism : Correspondence and a New History
Fawn Brodie and Her Quest for Independence
Fawn Brodie on Joseph Smith's Plural Wives and Polygamy : A Critical View
Fawn M. Brodie--Her Biographies as Autobiography
Fawn McKay Brodie : A Biographer's Life
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
Literary Style in No Man Knows My History : An Analysis
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
Secular or Sectarian History? : A Critique of No Man Knows My History