Item Detail
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6375
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6
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10
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English
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The Evolution of Mormon Culture in Eastern Arizona
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Spring 1972
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40
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2
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122-41
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The author is a trained anthropologist and the article is an anthropological one. Author looks at the Mormon communities on the Little Colorado during the 19th and 20th centuries and the role of the LDS church in the success of these communities. He sees the Church in the 19th century as a theocrat and economic planner that fostered cooperation and independence. He sees the Church abandoning its theocratic role during the 20th cnetury espousing only general and transcendental values.
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A Mormon Melting Pot : Ethnic Acculturation in Cedar City, Utah, 1880-1915
Mormon World View and American Culture
Nineteenth-Century Mormon Architecture and City Planning
Pomerene, 1946-1947
The Making of Saints : The Mormon Town as a Setting for the Study of Cultural Change
Thomas F. O'Dea on the Mormons : Retrospect and Assessment -
A History of Holbrook and the Little Colorado Country (1540-1962)
Anti-Intellectualism in Mormon History
Arizona Pioneer Mormon, David King Udall : His Story and His Family, 1851-1938
From Wilderness to Empire : The Role of Utah in Western Economic History
Great Basin Kingdom : An Economic History of the Latter-day Saints, 1830-1900
Settlement on the Little Colorado, 1873-1900 : A Study of the Processes and Institutions of Mormon Expansion
The Middle Virgin River Valley, Utah : A Study in Cultural Growth and Change
The Mormons
The Mormons
Thoughts on Anti-Intellectualism : A Response