Item Detail
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30091
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1
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12
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English
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Framing the Nation : Religion, Film, and American Belonging
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Journal of Mormon History
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April 2019
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45
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2
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Champaign, IL
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University of Illinois Press; Mormon History Association
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23-48
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This article is about the Mormon presence and struggle in the film world, with anti-Mormonism as a driving force behind movies about Mormonism, and the effects that had and still has on the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints's public image and presence in America.
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A Peculiar People : Anti-Mormonism and the Making of Religion in Nineteenth-Century America
Commercial Propaganda in the Silent Film : A Case Study of A Mormon Maid (1917)
Intolerable Zion : The Image of Mormonism in Nineteenth Century American Literature
Marking Mormon Difference : How Western Perceptions of Islam Defined the 'Mormon Menace'
Messages from the Missions
Perpetuation of a Myth : Mormon Danites in Five Western Novels, 1840-1890
Religion of a Different Color: Race and the Mormon Struggle for Whiteness
"Scandalous Film" : The Campaign to Suppress Anti-Mormon Motion Pictures, 1911-12
The Letters of an Apostate Mormon to his Son
The Mormon Menace : Violence and Anti-Mormonism in the Postbellum South
The Mormon Question : Polygamy and Constitutional Conflict in Nineteenth-Century America
The Viper on the Hearth : Mormons, Myths, and the Construction of Heresy