Item Detail
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31928
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7
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11
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English
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A Voice Crying from the Dust : The Book of Mormon as Sound
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Dialogue : A Journal of Mormon Thought
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2015
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48
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4
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Farmington, UT
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Dialogue Foundation
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3-44
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This article discusses the conundrum of written scripture's attempt to convey doctrines and experiences that generally included audio and/or visual, such as visions, voices from heaven, and sermons. It highlights three levels of aural logics in the Book of Mormon : the book's repeated self-characterization as "a voice crying from the dust," the undermining of the stability of writing by sounding and hearing in the larger narrative of the book, and the process of producing the book in the 1820's.
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Eternity in the Ether
Experiment Upon the Word
Media as compromise : a cultural history of Mormonism and new communication technology in twentieth-century America
Mormons, Musical Theatre and Belonging in America
Mormons, Musical Theatre, and Belonging in America
Staging the Saints : Mormonism and American Musical Theater
Women and Mormonism : Historical and Contemporary Perspectives -
Biographical Sketches of Joseph Smith the Prophet, and His Progenitors for Many Generations
By the Hand of Mormon : The American Scripture that Launched a New World Religion
David Whitmer Interviews : A Restoration Witness
Early Mormon Documents : Volume I
History of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Period I : History of Joseph Smith, the Prophet, by Himself
How Joseph Smith Translated the Book of Mormon : Evidence from the Original Manuscript
Joseph Smith : Rough Stone Rolling
Mormon Enigma : Emma Hale Smith
The Autobiography of Parley Parker Pratt
The Life and Thought of Orson Pratt
Worthy of Another Look : John Gilbert's 1892 Account of the 1830 Printing of the Book of Mormon