Item Detail
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4700
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11
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0
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English
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Myth, Mormonism, and Murder in the South
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South Atlantic Quarterly
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Spring 1976
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75
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212-25
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Examines inhumane acts directed against members of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from the post-Reconstruction period to the early 20th century for the purpose of understanding the broader question of violence in Southern history. Sociological and psychological explantations are analyzed in accounting for such mistreatment. Tennessee, Georgia and Alabama receive primary focus.
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A Stench in the Nostrils of Honest Men : Southern Democrats and the Edmunds Act of 1882
Backcounty Missionaries in the Post-Bellum South : Thomas Ephraim Harper's Experience
B. H. Roberts: A Life in the Public Arena
Doing the Works of Abraham : Mormon Polygamy―Its Origin, Practice, and Demise
History of the LDS Southern States Mission, 1867-1898
James Thompson Lisonbee : San Luis Valley Gathering, 1876-78
Out of the Black Patch : The Autobiography of Effie Marquess Carmack, Folk Musician, Artist, and Writer
Praying with One Eye Open : Mormons and Murder in Nineteenth-Century Appalachian Georgia
Robert Newton Baskin and the Making of Modern Utah
Saints, Slaves, and Blacks : The Changing Place of Black People within Mormonism
The Mormon Menace : Violence and Anti-Mormonism in the Postbellum South