Item Detail
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7060
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15
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0
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English
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Saints, Sinners, and Scribes : A Look at the Mormons in Fiction
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Utah Historical Quarterly
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Winter 1968
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36
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1
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63-76
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Article is a discussion of Mormonism as a literary subject. Traditional Mormon stereotypes are reviewed, as are the difficulties encountered in writing fiction that uses Mormonism as the backdrop.
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Bayard Taylor's 'The Prophet' : Mormonism as Literary Taboo
Doing the Works of Abraham : Mormon Polygamy―Its Origin, Practice, and Demise
Mormon cinema : Origins to 1956
Mormon Stereotypes in Nineteenth Century German Literature : The Fiction of Amalie Schoppe and Balduin Mollhausen
'No True Woman' : Conflicted Female Subjectivities in Women's Popular 19th Century Western Adventure Tales
Peculiar Portrayals : Mormons on the Page, Stage, and Screen
Perpetuation of a Myth : Mormon Danites in Five Western Novels, 1840-1890
Religion and Sexuality : The Shakers, the Mormons, and the Oneida Community
Solemn Covenant : The Mormon Polygamous Passage
The Boundaries of Utopia
The Brief History and Perpetually Exciting Future of Mormon Literary Studies
The Missouri and Illinois Mormons in Ante-Bellum Fiction
The Viper on the Hearth : Mormons, Myths, and the Construction of Heresy
'Truth is the Daughter of Time' : Notes Toward an Imaginative Mormon History
Zane Grey in Zion : An Examination of His Supposed Anti-Mormonism