Item Detail
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31905
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4
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18
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English
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“We’re Going to Take Our Land Back Over” : Indigenous Positionality, the Ethnography of Reading, and The Book of Mormon
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Americanist Approaches to the Book of Mormon
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New York, NY
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Oxford University Press
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This chapter argues that Indigenous Americans-- by virtue of being Indigenous-- are positioned significantly in relation to the Book of Mormon. The chapter provides a reading of the Book of Mormon by a Catawba woman, examining her perspective on passages regarding Gentiles, Zionism, and geography.
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All Abraham's Children : Changing Mormon Conceptions of Race and Lineage
An Ancient American Setting for the Book of Mormon
A Study of the Influence of the Mormon Church on the Catawba Indians of South Carolina, 1882-1975
A Voice of Warning and Instruction to All People: Containing a Declaration of the Faith and Doctrine of the Church of the Latter-day Saints, Commonly Called Mormons.
By the Hand of Mormon : The American Scripture that Launched a New World Religion
Early Mormonism and the Magic World View
Indian Origins and the Book of Mormon : Religious Solutions from Columbus to Joseph Smith
New Jerusalem Abandoned : The Failure to Carry Mormonism to the Delaware
Seeking the 'Remnant' : The Native American during the Joseph Smith Period
Simply Implausible : DNA and a Mesoamerican Setting for the Book of Mormon
Struggling to find Zion : Mormons in Colorado's San Luis Valley
The Book of Mormon as Amerindian Apocalypse
The First Mormon Mission to the Indians
The Millenarian World of Early Mormonism
The Mormon Menace : Violence and Anti-Mormonism in the Postbellum South
The Refiner's Fire : The Making of Mormon Cosmology, 1644-1844
The Use of "Lamanite" in Official LDS Discourses
"We Have Found What We Have Been Looking For!" : The Creation of the Mormon Religious Enclave Among the Catawba, 1883-1920