Item Detail
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26440
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4
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12
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English
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Beyond "Surreptitious Staring" : Migration, Missions, and the Generativity of Mormonism for the Comparative and Translocative Study of Religion
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Mormon Studies Review
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2014
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1
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Provo, UT
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Brigham Young University
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17-28
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This article's purpose "is to consider the implications of Mormonism for the comparative and transnational study of religion. ... in this brief essay I want to discuss Mormon displacement and emplacement, ... and I want to propose that consideration of these two themes, and others, shows that the Latter-day Saints offer an exceptionally generative case study for translocative history, historical accounts that trace cultural flows across geographical boundaries, and comparative analysis, the justly maligned but still useful strategy of interpreting one tradition in terms of another." [AUTHOR'S ABSTRACT]
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Early Mormon Missionary Activities in Japan, 1901-1924
Exhibiting Mormonism : The Latter-day Saints and the 1893 Chicago World's Fair
Mormonism and the Japanese : A Guide to the Sources
Mormonism : The Story of a New Religious Tradition
Mormons in Mexico : The Dynamics of Faith and Culture
Proclamation to the People : Nineteenth-Century Mormonism and the Pacific Basin Frontier
Rethinking the International Expansion of Mormonism
Rich Among the Poor : Church, Firm, and Household Among Small-Scale Entrepreneurs in Guatemala City
The Gentle Blasphemer : Mark Twain, Holy Scripture, and the Book of Mormon
The Mormon Church and German Immigrants in Southern Brazil : Religion and Language
The Rise of Mormonism
The Scattering of the Gathered and the Gathering of the Scattered : The Mormon Diaspora in the Mid-Twentieth Century