Item Detail
-
32245
-
3
-
12
-
English
-
The Sociological and Social Psychological Aspects of the Mormon Polygamous Family
-
University of Wisconsin
-
PhD
-
"The Mormon polygamous family is approached in this study as a source of data on several questions of the relationship of the structure of the personality to the institutional forms of behavior, especially the family organization, prescribed by a given culture. The Mormon family has been largely neglected by previous workers in this field; consequently a considerable portion of the present work had to be given over to setting the background against which the family processes operated-- the physical and economic characteristics of the Mormon commmunity as they affected polygamy, and the more mechanical features of the polygamous family itself, such as biological and economic processes and responses to the problem of housing the wives and children." [Author]
-
Brigham Young
Brigham Young, the Colonizer
Latter-day Saint Biographical Encyclopedia
Mormonism : Its Leaders and Designs
Pioneers and Prominent Men of Utah
Revelation in Mormonism : Its Character and Changing Forms
Some Social and Economic Features of American Fork
The Founding of Utah
The Mormon Village : A Study in Social Origins
The Second United Order among the Mormons
The Story of the Mormons : From the Date of Their Origin to the Year 1901
The United Order among the Mormons (Missouri Phase) : An Unfinished Experiment in Economic Organization