Item Detail
-
2934
-
10
-
0
-
English
-
Fawn McKay Brodie : An Oral History Interview
-
Dialogue : A Journal of Mormon Thought
-
Summer 1981
-
14
-
99-116
-
Excerpts from an interview conducted in November 1975 by the California State University at Fullerton with historian Fawn M. Brodie. Discusses growing up near Ogden, Utah, the occupational and political pursuits of her father, and her impressions of the influence of family and religion in her life. Brodie criticizes the parochialism of the mid-20th century Mormon community of her youth, discusses her education at the University of Utah and the University of Chicago, and describes her eventual rejection of Mormonism. Also discusses her activities as a historian, and her interest in psychohistory and psychobiography in relationship to her studies of Joseph Smith, Thomas Jefferson, and Richard Nixon. Covers 1940-80.
-
A History of Dialogue, Part Two : Struggle Toward Maturity, 1971-1982
By Study and Also by Faith : Essays in Honor of Hugh W. Nibley on the Occasion of His Eightieth Birthday, 27 March 1990
Grass Roots Deviance from Official Doctrine
Joseph Smith's Family Dynamics
Mormon Women : A Bibliography in Process, 1977-1985
Naturalistic Assumptions and the Book of Mormon
Priceless Words and Fallible Memories : Joseph Smith as Seen in the Effort to Preserve His Discourses
Something to Move Mountains : The Book of Mormon in Hugh Nibley's Correspondence
Telling Latter-Day Saint Lives : The Craft and Continuing Challenge of Mormon Biography
Women in Utah History : Paradigm or Paradox?