Item Detail
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8339
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3
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20
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English
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Advocacy and Inquiry in the Writing of Latter-day Saint History
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BYU Studies
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Spring 1991
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31
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139-79
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This article defines the relationship of spirituality and knowledge in an historical-writing context and asserts that the two are not mutually exclusive. The purpose of the article is to explain how to write valid history without bringing one's own religious beliefs into question. Exemplar historiography is examined in light of Mormon historiography.
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A Personal Odyssey : My Encounter with Mormon History
Dale Morgan on Early Mormonism : Correspondence and a New History
Early Mormonism and the Magic World View
Exiles in a Land of Liberty : Mormons in America, 1830-1846
Faith and History
Faithful History/Secular Faith
Historiography and the New Mormon History : A Historian's Perspective
Jan Shipps and the Mormon Tradition
Mormons and Their Historians
No Higher Ground
Objectivity and History
Roots of Modern Mormonism
Science and Theology : A Search for the Uncommon Denominator
The Case for the New Mormon History : Thomas G. Alexander and His Critics
The Challenge of Historical Consciousness : Mormon History and the Encounter with Secular Modernity
'The Mantle Is Far, Far Greater Than the Intellect'
The Mormon Experience : A History of the Latter-day Saints
The Prophet Puzzle : Suggestions Leading Toward a More Comprehensive Interpretation of Joseph Smith
The Search for Truth and Meaning in Mormon History
'Truth is the Daughter of Time' : Notes Toward an Imaginative Mormon History