Knowing Brother Joseph Again: The Book of Abraham, and Joseph Smith as Translator
Karl C. SandbergRead more
Winter 1989
The Winter 1989 issue presents thoughtful reflections on Joseph Smith’s legacy and Mormon history. Karl C. Sandberg examines Joseph Smith’s role as translator, specifically in relation to the Book of Abraham, while an interview with Leonard Arrington addresses challenges in Mormon historical interpretation. Stanford Cazier’s piece honors Arrington’s contributions to Mormon scholarship. Max Nolan explores the tension between materialism and Mormon teachings, and Michelle Stott discusses the intersections of Mormonism with existential philosophy. Carol Edison’s article on Mormon gravestones reveals cultural expressions of identity and belief. William A. Wilson examines Mormon folklore as a mirror reflecting cultural truths. The issue also includes Lisa Madsen de Rubilar’s fiction, exploring mortality and spirituality. And more!
How does one capture Leonard Arrington? It is a pleasure to attempt, but certainly no easy task. I see Leonard as scientists see nature: in four dimensions. But just as scientists are now discovering and…
In his landmark study of early Mormon economic life, Great Basin Kingdom, Leonard J. Arrington observed: Joseph Smith and other early Mormon leaders seem to have seen every part of life, and every problem put…
In the first century A.D., Pontius Pilate, confounded by Jesus Christ’s forceful witness to his mission to “bear witness unto the truth,” asked, “What is truth?” (John 18:38) This was neither the first nor the…
For years cultural geographers, folklorists, and other researchers have identified and delineated the Mormon region of the American West by charting characteristic elements of its cultural landscape. In his 1952 work The Mormon Village, Lowry…
José Luís was sick. That was why Michelle and Renata stopped by to see him on their way home from missionary zone meeting. They walked with Nielsen, his companion, who had gone to the meeting…
On 21 May 1839, Joseph Smith introduced an unusual entry in his journal history, writing, “To show the feelings of that long scattered branch of the house of Israel, the Jews, I here quote a…
I was stimulated, concerned, and saddened simultaneously as I read David Bailey’s article in DIALOGUE (Summer 1988) and reread Richard Pearson Smith’s Spring 1986 article, both discussing science and the LDS Church. I was stimulated…
I wish to thank Charles Boyd for bringing to light some additional material relevant to the topics discussed in my article on science and Mormonism. I will briefly respond to some of the issues he…
By now the Christmases of my life—all but one—have escaped re strictions of time and place and have arranged themselves, undated, in an intricate mosaic of memories, which can be instantly evoked by such small…
My friend’s two-year-old loves the stories in books. He loves them so much that sometimes he takes a book from his mother’s hands, places it on the floor, and tries to step into the story.…
It is a morning flight. We have gained altitude and are somewhere over the Colorado Rockies. Below, through breaks in the clouds, a thin film of early snowfall covers the mountaintops like a veil. High…
Out of the cold Christmas streets
we climb to an old woman
raising her scarfed face to us,
scarred and hollow-nosed,
Someone went shooting rabbits last night
blasting any flesh too slow to dodge.
I track the powdered ground until I toe
a scarlet gash melted to concrete.
Unfortunately but undeniably, the practice of polygamy is closely associated in the popular mind with the Mormons, fascinating both scholars and casual readers, generating a plethora of anecdotal studies, and resulting in many oversimplifications and…
It is an honor for me to speak here, partly because of the standard of excellence set by those who have preceded me at this podium, but primarily because of my respect for the man…