Item Detail
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27748
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1
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13
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English
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"Provident Living" : Ethnography, Material Culture, and the
Performance of Mormonism in Everyday Life -
Mormon Studies Review
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3
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Provo, UT
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Brigham Young University
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37-52
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In what follows, I ask how students of Mormon folklore might productively build on existing historical and folkloristic data from the Intermountain West in order to connect practices among Latter-day Saints to broader social, political, and cultural discussions.9 I encourage increased attention to those practices that seem transparently religious but are in fact more complicated mixes of cultures, places, choices, and histories. At the same time, I hope for more research investigating the nuances of LDS theology that give vernacular practice a Mormon twist, especially with regard to beliefs concerning materiality and materialism. [From the text]
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From Frontier Activism to Neo-Victorian Domesticity : Mormon Women in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries
Meetinghouses in the Mormon Mind : Ideology, Architecture, and Turbulent Streams of an Expanding Church
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Mormon Women and the Right to Wage Work
Nearly Everything Imaginable : The Everyday Life of Utah's Mormon Pioneers
Still, the Small Voice Narrative, Personal Revelation, and the Mormon Folk Tradition
The Cities of Zion? Mormon and non-Mormon town plans in the U.S. Mountain West, 1847-1930
The Significance of Trivia
The State of Mormon Folklore Studies