I love practical advice. suggestions:
I’m a sucker for how-to
how to schedule your time more
effectively, how to plan your days efficiently, or how to think about your life decisions in more conscious ways. I’m convinced that this is one of the many reasons why, as an “outsider” to the LDS movement, I am fascinated by—and in love with—this religious tradition. Mormons live to plan and to practice. From their early days in children’s programs, young LDS members are taught to think carefully about their life goals, to plot thoughtfully, and to live with the future in mind. Our conference this year highlights that very focus on practice, practice, practice—one of the primary integrating elements of life in the restoration.
In
keeping with this theme, our innovative and exciting conference program features a host of “how-to” sessions that will spark discussion and new ideas: sessions on writing history, on thinking about gender, and on living out one’s faith in distinctive cultural contexts and sites. We will dance, craft, and sing—all ways of honoring the abiding Mormon interest in self-expression. Shifting the focus of religious history to the issue of practice encourages all of us to consider the lived experiences of Mormons in a variety of settings and time periods. It suggests that the histories of ordinary believers are a critical component of the story of the Mormon movement as a whole. So, too, our tours introduce critical aspects of Mormon experience that have often been neglected. The worlds of African Americans and women in the LDS Church are highlighted in the pre-conference programs. Our business meeting will feature a session that focuses on lived experiences in non-U.S. church settings. After the conference, the tour on mining cultures will instruct participants on the myriad ways that LDS community life has been structured by—and has, in turn, affected—the pace and character of mining life in the Mormon culture region. We are so glad you have joined us. Let’s think together in creative ways about how the practice of Mormon life—in whatever forms that takes around the world—can shape our views of the past and present. The Church is changing, and so, too, is its history developing, as it keeps up with shifting notions of how to interpret the past. Welcome to the conversation!
LAURIE MAFFLY-KIPP, PRESIDENT
PRESIDENTIAL WELCOME
WELCOME TO THE MHA CONFERENCE 1
We are thrilled to welcome you to the 2016 MHA conference in Snowbird, Utah! This year’s theme is “Practice,” and was meant to be interpreted both provocatively (understanding elements of the Mormon experience in ways beyond what previous scholars have considered) and widely (bringing in considerations of Mormon life far outside the American context). We are pleased that MHA’s participants took up the challenge in such innovative and exciting ways, as displayed in the program. Attendees will be privileged to hear about the variations in how the LDS Church’s racial policies were “practiced” in Africa and South America prior to 1978, how Mormon identity has been “practiced” in theater and in cultural reenactments, how women writers “practiced” their devotion through novels and letters, and even “best practices” for teaching Mormon history in the university classroom. One innovative panel argues that hands-on practice of everyday activities such as spinning and tinsmithing can reveal historical insights inaccessible through texts (and will include a full-sized spinning wheel and other authentic tools to demonstrate that point). The Friday membership luncheon brings together participants from around the globe to discuss the international dimensions of contemporary LDS and Community of Christ history and practice. We are confident that listeners will leave this conference with a better understanding of the breadth and depth of Mormonism’s culture and history. Of course the program also features panels that cover traditional hallmarks of Mormon historical scholarship, like the Book of Mormon, polygamy, and the rise of Mormon political conservatism, though in new and innovative ways. There are also panels that address contemporary issues, like the roundtable on Mormon feminism in the twenty-first century, the function of social media in shaping Mormon culture, or the varieties of Mormon mothering. And for those who want a better understanding of modern LDS archiving practices, there are workshops meant to demystify the LDS Church’s Granite Mountain Vault and the Church History Library’s policies governing access to documents. Whatever your interests are, there should be something for you. So bring a notebook, open your mind to new ideas, and genuinely enjoy yourself over these few days while feasting on a rich array of new work and engaging perspectives.
MELISSA WEI-TSING INOUYE, -
BENJAMIN E. PARK
University of Auckland, Co-Chair
University of Missouri, Co-Chair
GINA COLVIN, University of Canterbury
MAURO PROPERZI, Brigham Young University
JARED HICKMAN, Johns Hopkins University
NATALIE ROSE, Michigan State University
JANELLE HIGBEE, Independent Scholar
CHRISTINE TALBOT, University of Northern Colorado
ROBIN JENSEN, LDS Church History Department
CHRYSTAL VANEL, Groupe Sociétés, Religions, Laïcité (GSRL), Paris, France
WELCOME TO SNOWBIRD! 2 Nestled in the mountain paradise of Little Cottonwood Canyon, roughly fifteen miles from downtown Salt Lake City, the steep canyon is home to the Wasatch-Cache National Forest, carved out by an alpine glacier in the last ice age. The steep granite walls at the mouth of the canyon provided quartz monzonite for the Mormon pioneer construction of the Salt Lake Temple, and the Albion Basin at the top of the canyon is home to a number of rare plants and wildflowers. In addition to providing stone for the Mormon temple and housing a mountain vault closed to the public, Snowbird is a historic site: miners discovered silver within the rugged confines of the glacial canyon in 1869. The deposits soon evolved into a massive industry with one of the largest producers of silver ore in the Wasatch Mountains, producing more than $3.8 million in silver. At its peak, 8,000 people lived and worked in the canyon, with two smelters, 138 homes, hotels, boarding houses, stores, and a railroad. The town was later destroyed by a series of avalanches. The snow provided a new life to the area: in 1971, the narrow canyon became home to the world-famous Snowbird ski resort, a site for the 2002 Winter Olympics. Today, Snowbird and Little Cottonwood Canyon are home to recreational activities including hiking, camping, fishing, mountain biking, rock climbing, bouldering, and of course skiing, snowboarding, and backcountry use. Snowbird is the perfect location for MHA’s 2016 conference. Preconference tours will travel to local sites in the Salt Lake valley with themes on the Utah African American experience and Mormon women’s public life and activism. Two preconference workshops will take attendees on location to the Daughters of Utah Pioneers to discuss material culture with past MHA president and Pulitzer Prize-winning specialist Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, and crack research tips will be presented at the LDS Church History Library. A post-conference tour will explore historic mining and architectural sites along the Wasatch Front and Back, including Park City, Copperton, and Bingham. You won’t want to miss the on-site conference events. Our opening reception will include a local arts and crafts exhibition as well as a performance by the Lower Lights, a local hymn revival band known for their folksy bluegrass approach to familiar hymns, overlooked hymns, and more, connecting to beautiful, old songs with a rich mine of harmony, part-revival, part-vigil. Throughout the conference, MHA will host a Relief Society bazaar to raise money for the Mormon Women’s History Initiative Team, where you’ll be able to bid for homemade items such as quilts and jams and cookies, as well as modern history services, such as editing and writing. Our closing reception will include a showing of clips from the Mormon film archive at BYU. We are delighted to welcome you to Snowbird. ANNE BARRETT, EMILY UTT, AND JENNY REEDER, LOCAL ARRANGEMENTS CO-CHAIRS.
OFFICERS & BOARD MEMBERS
3
LAUREL THATCHER ULRICH PAST PRESIDENT
LAURIE MAFFLY-KIPP PRESIDENT
BRYON ANDREASEN
DARIUS GRAY
JB HAWS
JOSEPH STUART
LISA OLSEN TAIT
ROBERT L. RACKER
PUBLICATIONS
STUDENT REPRESENTATIVE
MEMBERSHIP
PUBLIC RELATIONS
AWARDS
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
BRIAN Q. CANNON PRESIDENT-ELECT
PATRICK MASON
JONATHAN STAPLEY
JESSIE EMBRY
JEFFERY O. JOHNSON
EDUCATION LIAISON
EDITOR OF THE JOURNAL OF MORMON HISTORY
FINANCES
HISTORIAN/ARCHIVIST
2016 MHA COMMITTEES 4 NOMINATING
STUDENT RELATIONS
Glen M. Leonard, Chair Richard E. Bennett Keith Erekson
Joseph Stuart, Chair
JOURNAL OF MORMON HISTORY EDITOR
MEMBERSHIP AND DEVELOPMENT
Jessie Embry
Darius Gray, Chair Robert L. Racker
JOURNAL BOARD OF EDITORS
LIAISON
PUBLICATIONS
Gary Bergera Michael H. Paulos Fr. Daniel P. Dwyer Janiece Johnson Colleen McDannell Marjorie Newton Barbara Walden Jennifer L. Lund Matthew Garrett Patricia Scott Rachel Cope
Bryon Andreason, Chair
Ronald Bartholomew - Book Review Editor
PUBLIC RELATIONS
CONFERENCE PHOTOGRAPHY AND PUBLICITY
Patrick Q. Mason, Chair
FINANCE AND FUND-RAISING Jonathan Stapley, Chair Robert L. Racker
Lisa Olson Tait, Chair
Steve Mayfield
LONG-TERM & STRATEGIC PLANNING Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, Chair Laurie Maffly-Kipp Brian Q. Cannon Robert L. Racker
AWARDS JB Haws, Chair Tom Alexander-Arrington Subcommittee Chair Lavina Fielding Anderson Richard L.Bushman Tona Hangen-Book Subcomittee Chair Elise Boxer Wilfried Decoo Fr. Daniel P Dwyer Barbara Walden
Sheree Bench-Article Subcomittee Chair Janelle Higbee Mark Ashurst-McGee Susanna Morrill David Morris Brian Birch-Student Work Subcommittee Chair Sheree Bench Scott Esplin Boyd Petersen Greg Prince
CONFERENCE PROGRAM DESIGN: Shane Allman (Cover), Brooke Woodall
CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS
CONFERENCE
5 OPENING PLENARY FR I D A Y , JU N E 10 • 9: 00 - 10: 00 A M • B A LLR O O M M OR M O N P R A C TI C E : A N A N TH R OP OLO GI S T’S P ER SPEC T IVE A B S TR A C T: A nt hr opologic al appr oac hes pr iv ilege t he v i e w p o i n t fro m r eligion- as - pr ac t ic ed: M or m onis m ‘is ’ w hat is done o n a d a i l y b a s i s , in any par t ic ular t im e and plac e w her e people def in e th e ms e l v e s a s Lat t er - day S aint s . C annell dis c us s es t he w ay L a tte r-d a y Sa i n t w om en in a par t ic ular w ar d nav igat e t he r eligious w o rk o f b e c o m i n g and r em aining M or m on. I n t he c our s e of t his w o rk , th e y c o me s ur pr is ingly c los e t o f or m s of r eligious lif e w hic h w o u l d i n o th e r f or m s of C hr is t ian pr ac t ic e be des c r ibed as ‘int er ce s s i o n a ry ’ . BIO:
FANELLA CANNELL
D r Fenella C annell has been w or k ing w it h A m e ri c a n L a tte r-d a y S aint s at int er v als s inc e 2001, and has c ondu c te d p a rti c i p a n t obs er v at ion f ieldw or k on M or m onis m in ups t at e N e w Yo rk a n d i n U t ah. S he is als o a s pec ialis t in S out heas t A s ian a n th ro p o l o g y a n d has w r it t en m or e br oadly on t he r elat ions hip bet w e e n C h ri s ti a n i ty and s oc ial t heor y .
MEMBERSHIP LUNCHEON PANEL CHRYSTAL VANEL Chrystal Vanel is a postdoctoral researcher at the GSRL (Paris), a laboratory from the French National Center of Scientific Research. His historical and sociological research are on Mormonisms and Protestantisms.
MELISSA INOUYE Melissa Wei-Tsing Inouye is a lecturer in Asian Studies at the University of Auckland and an associate editor of the Mormon Studies Review. Her areas of research specialization include religion and morality in China, the history of women and religion, and Asian and Pacific Mormonism.
GINA COLVIN Gina Colvin is a lecturer at the University of Canterbury in Christchurch, New Zealand specializing in whiteness and critical race studies. She is of Ngati Porou and Nga Puhi descent and hails from a multi-generational Mormon Māori family. Gina has been a guest editor for the Journal of Mormon History, she is an international editor for Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, maintains a Patheos blog, “Kiwimormon," and is the host of "A Thoughtful Faith" Podcast.
CHIUNG HWANG CHEN Chiung Hwang Chen is professor of communication, media and cultural studies at Brigham Young University-Hawai’i. Her research interests include gender, race, religion, and politics related issues in media and cultural studies.
WAYNE CROSBY FR I D A Y , JU N E 10 12: 15 - 1: 45 “ G LOB A L P R A C TI C E : PER S P E C TI V E S ON M OR M O N D I V E R S I TY ”
Wayne Crosby graduated from the University of Utah with a bachelor’s degree in Business Management. Over the past 27 years he has worked for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints in several capacities. Since 2009, he has been the Director of Global Support and Acquisitions for the LDS Church History Department.
HIGHLIGHTS
CONFERENCE HIGHLIGHTS
6 SMITH-PETTIT LECTURE S A TU R D A Y , JU N E 11 • 9: 00 - 10: 00 A M • B A LLR O O M RE C K ON I N G WI TH H I S TO R Y : R I C H A R D B U S H MAN , G EO R G E M A R S D E N , A N D TH E A R T OF B I OG R A P H Y R ichard Bushman and George Marsden rank as two of the most distinguished historians in the world. Their distinction lies not only in the quantity and quality of their work but also in their public commitment to w rite from the perspective of their faith traditions, Mormon and Evangelical. Focusing on Bushman’s prize-winning biography of Joseph Smith and Marsden’s prize-winning biography of Jonathan Edwards, this talk will explore some of the assumptions, methods, and goals that mark the work of these two scholars. In most ways they parallel each other, but in some respects their Christian alignments foster differences of approach and outlook.
GRANT WACKER
BIO: Grant Wacker is the Gilbert T. Rowe Professor Emeritus of Christian H istory at Duke Divinity School. He is the author of Heaven Below: Early Pentecostals and American Culture (2001), and America’s Pastor: Billy Graham and the Shaping of a Nation (2014), both publi shed by Harvard U niversity Press. Wacker is past president of the Society for Pentecostal Studies, past president of the American Society of Church History, and a former senior editor of Church History: Studies in Christianity and Culture.
PRESIDENTIAL ADDRESS SA TU R D A Y , JU N E 11 • 7: 00 - 9: 00 P M • B A LLR O O M TH E C LOC K A N D TH E C OM P A S S : M OR M O N C U LTU R E IN MO T IO N The early Mormon movement was an orienteering tradition. As the Saints moved across the American landscape, they focused intently on a new understanding of time and space that reframed their collective destiny. But what does the more recent growth of the LDS Church, especially in the Southern Hemisphere, suggest about revisions to that original geographic and temporal organizing scheme? As the Church maps itself onto different landscapes, how will community practices be reoriented or revised?
LAURIE MAFFLY-KIPP
BIO: Laurie F. Maffly-Kipp is the Archer Alexander Distinguished Professor in the Humanities at Washington University in St. Louis, where she works in the John C. Danforth Center on Religion and Politics. Her previous publications include Religion in Frontier California (1994), Proclamation to the People: Ni neteenth-Century Mormonism and the Pacific Basin Frontier (edited with Reid Neilson, 2008), and Setting Down the Sacred Past: African American Race Histories, 1780-1920 (2010). She was the recipient in 2014 of the James W.C. Pennington Award in African American History from the University of Heidelberg, and is a past president of the American Society of Church History.
MAP OF CLIFF LODGE 7 LEVEL B AV 3 AV 5
AV 2
CONFERENCE REGISTRATION & CHECK-IN
AV 1
AV 4
LEVEL C
EXHIBITOR AREA
Primrose AB
MOTHER’S LOUNGE
ATM
Primrose B A
T H U R S D AY 9 J U N E
Day at a Glance
SNOWBIRD CLIFF LODGE
SNOWBIRD CLIFF LODGE
SNOWBIRD CLIFF LODGE
BALLROOM
7:00 - 6:00
Registration
ALL DAY
Church History Library: Power Searching Shuttle Departs
8:00 AM
Utah African American Experience Tour Bus Departs
8:15 AM Mormon Women’s Public Life and Activism Tour
8:30 AM
Bus Departs
Church History Library: Power Searching Shuttle Returns
Material Culture Shuttle Departs
12:30 PM
1:30 PM Utah African American Experience Tour Bus Returns
Mormon Women’s Public Life and Activism Tour Bus to Return
Material Culture Shuttle Returns
5:00 PM
6:00 PM
7:00 PM
Utah African American Experience
Join us for a tour of significant sites and stories related to African-Americans in Utah. Led by Darius Gray and others, this tour includes stops at homes, churches, cemeteries, parks, museums and many others. Sites with connections to Latter-day Saint Church History will be visited along with sites connected to broader themes and experiences.
Women’s Public Life and Activism
Join historians Andrea Radke-Moss and Janelle Higbee for a special pre-conference tour of Mormon Women’s Public Life and Activism.
Church History Library: Power Searching
Bring your laptop, questions, and curiosity to the MHA “Power Searching” Workshop at the CHL to learn tips and tricks that will enlarge your research in CHL resources.
Material Culture
Material Culture is a rich historical resource but it can be difficult to understand this source material and how to use it in your research. Join Laurel Thatcher Ulrich for a half-day workshop on LDS material culture research hosted by the International Society of the Daughters of Utah Pioneers.
8
F R I D AY 1 0 J U N E Day at a Glance
9 BALLROOM / GOLDEN CLIFF 6:30 - 8:00
9:00 - 10:00
PRIMROSE A
PRIMROSE B
MAYBIRD
WASATCH B
Sacred Books, Solemn Rites: Text, Ritual, and Cosmos in Mormon History
Priesthood: Policy and Practice in Africa and Latin America
Mormonism in Practice: Insights from Church History Dept. 2016 Releases
“Deny Not the Gifts of God”: Charismata in Mormon Memory and Practice
Holy Theater: Mormon Performance, Identity and Representation
From Earthly to Eternal Families: Historical and Cultural Insights into Latter-day Saint Heaven Discourse
Faith and Science: The Intersection of Mormonism and Eugenics
The Granite Mountain Records Vault
Newcomer’s Breakfast Golden Cliff
Opening Plenary Ballroom
10:00 - 10:30 10:30 - 12:00
BREAK
12:00 - 12:15 12:15 - 1:45
Membership Luncheon -Panel Ballroom
BREAK
1:45 - 2:00 The Council of Fifty Minutes: An Initial Scholarly Appraisal
2:00 - 3:30 3:30 - 4:00
Author Meets Critics: A Panel Discussion of Hokulani Aikau’s A Chosen People, A Promised Land: Mormonism and Race in Hawai’i
4:00 - 5:00
Gendering Nineteenth-Century Mormonism
BREAK The Intellectual and Theological World of Early Mormonism
5:00 - 6:00
6:00 - 7:00
7:00 - 8:45
Awards Banquet
8:45 - 10:00
Student Reception
Ballroom
Golden Cliff
Exhibitor Hall open from 8:00 am - 6:30 pm
10 MAGPIE B
WASATCH A
MAGPIE A
WHITE PINE 6:30 - 8:00
9:00 - 10:00 10:00 - 10:30 Practicing as They Practiced: Enhancing Historical Understanding Through Material Culture and Living History
Lives Consecrated: May and James Talmage, Their Relationship and Work
Of Myths, Memories, and Missions: The Practices of Modern Mormon Missionaries
Progressive Practice: Development of Church Institutions at the Turn of the Century
BREAK
10:30 - 12:00 12:00 - 12:15 12:15 - 1:45
BREAK Twentieth-Century Mormon Practices in Eastern Europe
1:45 - 2:00 The Perils and Pitfalls of Mormon Biography
Mormon Pilgrimages to (the) Holy Land(s)
Mormonism and Social Practice in Nineteenth-Century France
BREAK Strangers in the Borderlands: An Unlikely Tale from the Mormon Mexican Colonies
Leonard Arrington and the History Division: Lessons to be Learned
Fundamentalist Mormon Apostolic United Brethren
2:00 - 3:30 3:30 - 4:00
“That They May Dwell in a Place of Their Own�: The Evolution of Deaf Latter-day Saint Worship and Gathering Places
4:00 - 5:00 5:00 - 6:00
6:00 - 7:00
7:15 - 9:00
8:00 - 9:00 9:15 - 10:30
in Superior A and B
S AT U R D AY 1 1 J U N E Day at a Glance
11 BALLROOM / GOLDEN CLIFF 7:30 - 8:30
9:00 - 10:00
PRIMROSE A
PRIMROSE B
MAYBIRD
WASATCH B
The Book of Mormon: New Views of an Old Text
Joseph Smith, Josephine Lyon, and the Puzzles of Nauvoo Polyandry
Contested Memories of the 1838 Missouri-Mormon War
On Active Duty: The Utah War’s Women at Home and Afield
Mormon Women’s History Initiative Team Breakfast Golden Cliff Smith-Pettit Lecture Plenary Speaker: Grant Wacker Ballroom
10:00 - 10:30 10:30 - 12:00
BREAK
12:00 - 12:15 12:30 - 2:00
LUNCH ON YOUR OWN
LUNCH ON YOUR OWN BREAK
1:45 - 2:00 Ezra Taft Benson and the Rise of American Conservatism after 1960
2:30 - 4:00
The Legal World of Early and Contemporary Mormonism
4:30 - 5:30
The Book of Mormon in Historical and Comparative Perspectives
The Elections and Travels of Church Leaders in the Twentieth Century
Mormonism and World Leaders
Restriction-ism Unveiled! A Workshop on Research Access and Intellectual Property at the Church History Library
BREAK
5:30 - 7:00
9:00 - 10:00
The Practice of Mormon Mothering
BREAK
4:00 - 4:30
7:00 - 9:00
YouTube as Historical Archive for Lived Religion and Digital Pedagogy
PRE-PURCHASED BOX LUNCHES CAN BE PICKED UP IN BALLROOM LOBBY
Presidential Banquet Ballroom Closing Reception Ballroom
Exhibitor Hall open from 8:00 am - 6:30 pm
9 MAGPIE B
WASATCH A
MAGPIE A
12
WHITE PINE 7:30 - 8:30
9:00 - 10:00 10:00 - 10:30 People, Places and Businesses in Territorial Utah
Women Writers and the Practice of Mormonism
Mormon Uniqueness and Identity Formation
Practicing 21st Century Research
BREAK
12:00 - 12:15
LUNCH ON YOUR OWN
PRE-PURCHASED BOX LUNCHES CAN BE PICKED UP IN BALLROOM LOBBY
12:30 - 2:00
BREAK Sacred Geography, Sacred Artifacts, Sacred Sites
Mormon Feminist Social Networks in the Late Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Centuries
1:45 - 2:00 The Public Side of Mormon Distinctiveness, 1831-49
Mormonism and Religious Sensibility
BREAK Teaching Mormon History: Pedagogy Workshop
Nathaniel Baldwin and the Spread of Early Fundamentalist Mormonism
The Practice of Mormon Missionary Work
BREAK
10:30 - 12:00
2:30 - 4:00 4:00 - 4:30
A Close Look at Willima B. Smith: In the Shadow of a Prophet
4:30 - 5:30 5:30 - 7:00
7:00 - 9:00
9:00 - 10:00
in Superior A and B
S U N D AY 1 2 J U N E Day at a Glance
13 TOTAL BALLROOM
SNOWBIRD VALET PARKING
8:30
8:30 Sunday Devotional Wain Myers Speaker One Voice Choir (Genesis Group)
9:00
Mining and Community Building in Zion overnight (Park City) Bus Departs
11:00
7:30
9:00
LDS Film Tour bus leaves
5:00PM MONDAY
KAERB Mining and Community Building in Zion (Park City) Bus Returns
Devotional
Mining and Community Building in Zion
Explore the dynamic connections between Mormonism, mining, and the growth of communities along the Wasatch Front and Back
CONFERENCE INFO MOTHER’S LOUNGE For those in need, the Little Pine breakout room on Level C has been set up as a complimentary Mother’s Lounge. REGISTRATION DESK The registration desk (located on Level B) can assist you with any questions or concerns, including schedule issues, event information, and any other assistance you may need. The registration desk hours are: Wednesday............ 3 PM - 7 PM Thursday................ 7 AM - 6 PM Friday..................... 7 AM - 6 PM Saturday................. 7 AM - 4 PM LOST AND FOUND In case of lost items, a Lost and Found is located at the registration desk on level B. If lost items are found, please return them to the registration desk.
11:00
7:30
5:00PM MONDAY
SPEAKER GUIDE 13.5 NAME...........................................PAGE # (SESSION #)
Adam s , L in d a Hu n te r ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21( 4E ) Ai k au, Ho k u la n i K ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18( 3A ) Al exand e r , T h o ma s ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21( 4E ) Al ford, Ke n n e th L . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . 21( 4D ) Al lred, Ma s o n ............. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17( 2F ) Al v ord, T r e v o r ............. . . . . . . . . . . . . 21( 4G ) Anders o n , De v e r y ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . 17( 2G ) Augus tin e - Ad a ms , K if.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24( 6A ) Bennion, J a n e t............ . . . . . . . . . . . . 19( 3G ) Barber, Ia n ................ . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18( 3B ) Baugh, A le x a n d e r L . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20( 4C ) Bennett , Ric h a r d ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16( 2A ) Bergera , Ga r y J a me s ... . . . . . . . . . . . . 24( 6C ) Box er, E lis e ............... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18( 3A ) Bradl ey, Do n .............. . . 16( 2B ) , 20( 4B ) Bradl ey- Ev a n s , Ma r th a . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17( 2G ) Brady, De b i................ . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15( 1E ) Bratt, J o r d a n F . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22( 5B ) Bray , Ju s tin ............... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23( 5H ) Bri ggs , Ro b e r t Ha v e n .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 21( 4E ) Bri nghur s t, Ne we ll G. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22( 5A ) Bri nkerho ff- P la tt, J e n n i f er . . . . . . . . 17( 2D ) Brown, B a r b a r a J o n e s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 19( 3E ) Brown, Sa mu e l............ . . 20( 4A ) , 23( 5H ) Bus hm a n , Cla u d ia ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22( 5C ) Bus hm a n , Ric h a r d ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16( 2A ) Call, H a d y n B. ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15( 1E ) Call, J a r e d ................. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23( 5E ) Cannel l, F e n e lla ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . 14( O P ) Cannon, J e ffr e y G. .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14( 1B ) Cannon, K e n n e th L . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24( 6B ) Chatela in , J e r e my J . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23( 5F ) Chen, Ch iu n g Hwa n g ... . . . . . . . . . . . . 16( M L) Chris tens e n , Clin to n D. . . . . . . . . . . . 14( 1B ) Cl ark, A la n J . ............. . . . . . . . . . . . . 15( 1D ) Cl ark, Ca s s a n d r a L . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18( 3C ) Colv in, Gin a ............... . . 16( M L) , 23( 5F ) Combs, Ry a n L e a v itt.... . . . . . . . . . . . . 21( 4G ) Cropper , Co r r y ............ . . . . . . . . . . . . 17( 2H ) Cros by, W a y n e ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . 16( M L) Dav is , Nic h o la s ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . 15( 1H ) Derr, J ill Mu lv a y ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14( 1C ) Di nger, J o h n S . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24( 6A ) Di rk maat, Ge r r it J . ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23( 5G ) Dowdle, B r e tt D. ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17( 2F ) Dri ggs , Ke n ................ . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25( 6F ) Duncan, Ch r is tin a ....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23( 5F ) Espl in, S c o tt C. ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23( 5E ) El iason, Er ic .............. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15( 1G ) Erek s on, Ke ith A . ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25( 6G ) El ls worth , Br a n t W . .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 15( 1G ) Em ery, Eliz a b e th ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . 17( 2H ) Falater, Me g a n ........... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 24( 6D ) Feinauer , J o h n C. ...... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 22( 5B ) Fl ake, K a th le e n .......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14( 1A ) Fl em ing, S te p h e n J . ... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 23( 5D ) Fl uhman, J . Sp e n c e r ... . . 15( 1F ) , 16( M L) Fos ter, Cr a ig L . ......... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25( 6F ) Fos ter, L a wr e n c e ........ . . . . . . . . . . . . . 16( 2B ) Giv ens , T e r r y l............. . . 18( 3B ) , 20( 4A ) Godfrey, A u d r e y M. .... . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20( 4D ) Godfrey, Ma tth e w C. .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . 14( 1C )
G ol db e r g , R o b e r t A. ..............2 2 ( 5 A) G ol di n g , D a vi d ......................1 5 ( 1 G) G onza l e z, Jo h n .....................1 9 ( 3 E) G r ua, D a vi d W. ....................2 0 ( 4 C ) G r een, Sp e n ce r L . ................1 5 ( 1 G) G r i f f ith s, C a se y....................1 5 ( 1 H ) G r ow , M a tth e w ......................1 6 ( 2 A) H al es, Br i a n .........................2 0 ( 4 B) H al es, L a u r a H a r r i s...............1 7 ( 2 D ) H al es, Sco tt.........................2 1 ( 4 F) H al l , D a ve ............................2 2 ( 5 C ) H ang e n , To n a .......................1 6 ( 2 C ) H anks, M a xi n e ......................1 6 ( 2 B) H ar per , Ste ve n C . ................2 0 ( 4 C ) H ar r i s, M a tth e w L . ................2 2 ( 5 A) H at c h , Jo h n P. .....................1 7 ( 2 G) H ay c ock, M i ch a e l ..................1 6 ( 2 B) H eat h , Jo h n H . .....................1 8 ( 3 D ) H edg e s, An d r e w H . ...............2 3 ( 5 G) H enr ich se n , L yn n E. .............1 5 ( 1 D ) H i gbe e , Ja n e l l e .....................1 6 ( 2 B) H odg e s, Bl a i r .......................1 9 ( 3 H ) H ol br o o k, Ka te ...........1 7 ( 2 D ) ,2 2 ( 5 C ) I nouye , M e l i ssa ..........1 6 ( M L ) ,2 5 ( 6 H ) J ens e n , D e va n ......................1 7 ( 2 D ) J ens e n , R o b i n .......................1 4 ( 1 A) J ens e n , H e a th e r Be l n a p .........1 7 ( 2 H ) J es s o p , Jo e ..........................1 9 ( 3 G) J ohnso n , Ja n i e ce ..................2 3 ( 5 D ) J ohnso n , Je ff........................2 4 ( 6 C ) J ones, M e g a n Sa n b o r n ...........1 6 ( 2 C ) K ear n s, Al e c.........................1 5 ( 1 H ) K er by, Ta yl o r ........................2 1 ( 4 H ) K i ng, L a r r y...........................2 1 ( 4 E) K i t t er m a n , Ka th e r i n e ..............1 7 ( 2 E) K r am e r , Br a d l e y....................1 5 ( 1 D ) Lam b, C o n n i e .......................1 7 ( 2 E) Leahy, An n e .........................1 9 ( 3 H ) Lee, D a r yl ............................1 7 ( 2 H ) Lee, Rya n K. ........................1 5 ( 1 F) Lel egr e n , Ke l l y.....................1 5 ( 1 E) Lel egr e n , Sh a y.....................1 5 ( 1 E) Leona r d , Gl e n .......................2 4 ( 6 D ) M ac K a y, M i ch a e l ...................1 8 ( 3 C ) M ac K i n n o n , Wi l l i a m P. ..........2 0 ( 4 D ) M af f l y- Ki p p , L a u r i e ................2 5 ( 6 E) M c B r i d e , M a tth e w .................2 5 ( 6 H ) M ahas, Je ffr e y D . .................1 4 ( 1 C ) M ar qu a r d t, H . M i ch a e l ............2 4 ( 6 D ) M as on , Pa tr i ck Q. .................2 2 ( 5 A) M i nert, R o g e r .......................1 7 ( 2 E) M ons e n , Jo se p h P. ...............1 8 ( 3 D ) M or ga n , Ba r b a r a .........1 7 ( 2 D ) ,2 1 ( 4 D ) M or r i l l , Su sa n n a ...................2 2 ( 5 C ) M ur ph y, Jo n a th a n .................2 1 ( 4 G) M y er s, Wa i n ...............................1 3 N ei l s o n , R e i d L . .........1 8 ( 3 D ) ,2 4 ( 6 B) O ’ C onn e l l , Sa m .....................1 6 ( 2 C ) O m an , N a te ..........................2 4 ( 6 A) O ppe d i sa n o , C a l l i e ...............1 6 ( 2 C ) P ar k , Be n j a m i n E. ......1 9 ( 3 F) ,2 5 ( 6 E) P ar s h a l l , Ar d i s E. .................2 4 ( 6 C )
Pe r e g o , U g o .........................20(4B) Pe te r se n , Em i l y Ja nuary........22(5C) Pr i n ce , Gr e g o r y..........19(3F),24(6B) Po w e l l , R a n d a l l ....................23(5H) R a d ke - M o ss,An d r e a G .20(4C),25(6E) R e e d , An d r e w C . ........23(5G ),17(2F) R e e d , Sa r a h .........................21(4F) R e e d e r , Je n n y........ ..............17(2D) Reeve,W.Paul..14(1B),16(2A),25(6E) R e yn o l d s, El i se ...... ...............15(1F) R i fe , Ja r e d S. ......................15(1G ) R o g e r s, Br e n t M . .......20(4C),23(5G ) R o g e r s, Jo h n ........................18(3B) R o se tti , C r i sti n a M . ..............21(4H) R o ss, N a n cy.......... ...............23(5F) R o u e ch e , Ka r i L yn n e.............25(6H) R u th e r fo r d , Ta u n a l yn Ford......23(5D) R yska m p , Ge o r g e .... ..............21(4H) Se p p i , Gr e g o r y.....................18(3C) Sh i p p s, Ja n ..........................16(2A) Si l l i to , Jo h n .........................17(2G ) Sm i th , M e r i n a .......................20(4B) Sm i th , R . Er i c......... ..............14(1C) Sta p l e y, Jo n a th a n A. .............14(1A) Ste ve n so n , R u sse l l W. ..........14(1B) Str i n g h a m , D o u g ...................19(3H) Stu a r t, Jo se p h ....... ...............22(5B) Ta i t, L i sa Ol se n ...... ...............21(4F) Ta yl o r , Am b e r .......................17(2F) Ta l b o t, C h r i sti n e ...................21(4H) Ta l m a g e , Je r e m y...................14(1B) Th a yn e , Sta n l e y..... ...............18(3A) Te r r y, C h a r l o tte H a nsen.........23(5E) Ti e l e n s, Sa ski a .....................21(4F) To b l e r , R ya n G. ..... ....23(5D),14(1A) Th o m a s, Jo h n C . ..................15(1D) Ti n a j e r o , An j a ........ ...............23(5F) Tu r n e r , Je ff........... ...............22(5B) U l r i ch , L a u r e l Th a tcher..........15(1E) U tt, Em i l y.............................23(5E) Va n D yk, Ge r r i t...........15(1F),21(4G ) Va n Atta , D a l e ....... ...............19(3E) Va n e l , C h r ysta l .....................16(ML) Ve g a , Su j e y..........................18(3A) Wa cke r , Gr a n t............................20 Wa l ke r , Kyl e .........................24(6D) Wa te r s, Ka r i .......... ...............23(5F) Wa tso n , D a vi d ....... ...............25(6F) Wa tso n , M a r i a n n e T. ............25(6F) Wa tt, R o n a l d ......... ...............17(2E) We l ch , R o sa l yn d e Frandsen....20(4A) Wi e w o r a , N a th a n i e l . ..............23(5H) Wo o d g e r , M a r y Ja n e..............15(1H) Wr i g h t, Kr i sti n e L . . ...............22(5B)
FRIDAY 10 JUNE
14 9:00 - 10:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
Opening Plenary Session
Sacred Books, Solemn Rites: Text, Ritual, and Cosmos in Mormon History
Priesthood: Policy and Practice in Africa and Latin America
Mormonism in Practice: Insights from CHD’s 2016 Releases
OP
1A
1B
1C
session
Fanella Cannell
London School of Economics
Mormon Practice: An Anthropologist’s Perspective
session
session
Robin Jensen
Chair & Discussant LDS Church History Dept
W. Paul Reeve
Chair and Discussant University of Utah
Chair and Discussant LDS Church History Dept
Jeffrey G. Cannon
Matthew C. Godfrey
‘There is No End to Priesthood’: Nauvoo’s Marital Sealings in Light of the Book of Abraham
Practicing the Priesthood and Temple Ban in South Africa
A Season of Blessings: What We Learn about Ordination and Patriarchal Blessings in Kirtland, Ohio, from the Joseph Smith Papers
University of Virginia
LDS Church History Dept
Russell W. Stevenson Michigan State University
Mormon Ordination: Texts, Powers, and Priesthoods
Prophets and Prosperity: The Growth of Mormonism in Postcolonial Igboland, 1964-1981
Ryan G. Tobler
Jeremy Talmage
Keeping the Books of Life: Rituals and Recording in Early Mormonism
Blurring the Ban: Brazil’s Pre-1978 Black Priesthood Ordinations
Independent Scholar
Harvard University
LDS Church History Dept
PRIMROSE A
LDS Church History Dept
Jeffrey D. Mahas LDS Church History Dept
‘As Good an Institution As We Should Want’: The Council of Fifty, the Whistling and Whittling Movement, and the Quest for a Theocratic Government
Clinton D. Christensen
Jill Mulvay Derr
Racial Perception and the Priesthood: Practice Among Latin American and Caribbean Saints
How Women Created and Negotiated Their Institutional Presence: Emergent Narratives from Key Documents in The First Fifty Years of Relief Society
PRIMROSE B
MAYBIRD
LDS Church History Dept
9:00 - 10:00
R. Eric Smith
Kathleen Flake
Jonathan A Stapley
BALLROOM
session
1 0 : 3 0 - 1 2 : 0 01 0 : 3 0 - 1 2 : 0 0
LDS Church History Dept
FRIDAY 10 JUNE
15 10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
Deny Not the Gifts of God: Charismata in Mormon Memory and Practice
Practicing as They Practiced: Enhancing Historical Understanding Through Material Culture and Living History
Of Myths, Memories, and Missions: The Practices of Modern Mormon Missionaries
1D
1E
Lives Consecrated: May and James Talmage, Their Relationship and Work
Progressive Practice: Development of Church Institutions at the Turn of the Century
session
session
Bradley Kramer Chair and Discussant Writ & Vision
1F session
Laurel Thatcher Ulrich Chair and Discussant Harvard University
1G session
J. Spencer Fluhman Chair and Discussant Brigham Young University
1H session
David Golding
Chair Brigham Young University
Mary Jane Woodger Chair and Discussant Brigham Young University
Lynn E. Henrichsen
Kelly Lelegren
Gerrit van Dyk
Brant W. Ellsworth
Casey Griffiths
We Believe in the Gift of Tongues: Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Century LDS Missionary Experiences Learning and Using Foreign Languages
Home Manufacture and the Mormon Call to Dust Off the Spinning Wheel
May Booth Talmage: A Life of Reflection and Service
Portals to the Past: Reflexivity and the Study of Memories
Debi Brady
Elise Reynolds
LDS Church History Dept
Spencer L. Green
Young, Progressive, and in Love: Joseph F. Merrill, Laura Hyde and the Origins of Latter-day Saint Educational Practices
Brigham Young University
John C. Thomas Brigham Young U - Idaho
Ambivalence Lost? Remembering and Forgetting Unknown Tongues
Alan J. Clark
Claremont Graduate University
The LDS Antinomian Faith Crisis: Snuffer, Pontius, Kelly and the LDS Hunger for Spiritual Expression
WASATCH B
Cedar City, UT
UT Tour Guide Association
Use It Up, Wear It Out, Make It Do, Or Do Without: Weaving as a Cause for Mormon Frugality
Shay Lelegren Cedar City, UT
Tinsmithing in the Untamed West
Brigham Young University
James E. Talmage: Scientist, Educator, Apostle, and PR Man
Ryan K. Lee
Brigham Young University
Beyond Educator, Scientist, and Apostle: James E. Talmage as a Family Man
Hadyn B. Call
Utah State U/Davis School District
Pennsylvania State U, Harrisburg
Return with Bother: Awkward Dating Stories with Recently Returned Missionaries
Jared S. Rife
Central Pennsylvania College
LDS Missionary Acclimation and Adjustment: The Stories Fold Two by Two
Eric Eliason
Interpreting the Past through the Lens of Living History: The Material Culture of Mormon Pottery
MAGPIE B
York College
Brigham Young University
Comments
WASATCH A
10:30 - 12:00
MAGPIE A
Brigham Young University
Nicholas Davis
Brigham Young University
A Line in the Sand: Joseph Keeler’s Institutionalized Bishop’s Court Practices in the Progressive Era
Alec Kearns
Brigham Young University
The Boy Scouts of America and the Development of Mormon Patriotism in the Progressive Era
WHITE PINE
FRIDAY 10 JUNE
16 MEMBERSHIP LUNCHEON
12:15 - 1:45
2:00 - 3:30
2:00 - 3:30
2:00 - 3:30
Roundtable and Audience Discussion:
The Council of Fifty Minutes: An Initial Scholarly Appraisal
Gendering Nineteenth-Century Mormonism
Holy Theatre: Mormon Performance, Identity, and Representation
2A
2B
2C
“Global Practice: Perspectives on Mormon Diversity”
ML session
Membership Luncheon
Spencer Fluhman, Chair
Annual MHA Membership/ Business Report
session
Matthew Grow
Chair LDS Church History Dept
session
Janelle Higbee Chair Pleasant Grove, UT
session
Callie Oppedisano Chair Draper, UT
Panalists:
Michael Haycock
Tona Hangen
Richard Bushman
Have Done with Lesser Things: Foundations of Nineteenth-Century Mormon Masculinity
Performing Trek: Becoming ‘Pioneer Children’ in the Digital Age
Maxine Hanks
Sam O’Connell
Wayne Crosby
And Thou Shalt Be Ordained: Have Mormon Women Been Ordained Since 1830?
The Sacred and the Profane: Performing Mormon Identities in The Book of Mormon
Chrystal Vanel
Lawrence Foster
Megan Sanborn Jones
The Impact of the Great Mormon Trek West in 1846-47 on the Establishment of Polygamy and New Forms of Family and Kinship Ties among the Latter-day Saints
Testimony in the Muscles, in the Bone: Proxy Performance at the Mesa Easter Pageant
Alexandria, VA
Columbia University
Chiung Hwang Chen
Brigham Young University-Hawai’i
Gina Colvin
University of Canterbury
Melissa Inouye University of Auckland
Jan Shipps
Indiana University - Purdue University Indianapolis
Richard Bennett
Brigham Young University
Paul Reeve
University of Utah
LDS Church History Department
Salt Lake City, UT
Georgia Institute of Technology
GRSL, Paris, France
Worcester State University
Worcester State University
Brigham Young University
Don Bradley
Utah State University
Comments
BALLROOM
12:15-1:45 PM
PRIMROSE A
PRIMROSE B
10:30 - 12:00 2:00 - 3:30
MAYBIRD
FRIDAY 10 JUNE
17 2:00 - 3:30
2:00 - 3:30
2:00 - 3:30
2:00 - 3:30
2:00 - 3:30
From Earthly to Eternal Families: Historical and Cultural Insights into Latter-day Saint Heaven Discourse
Twentieth-Century Mormon Practices in Eastern Europe
Mormon Pilgrimages to (the) Holy Land(s)
The Perils and Pitfalls of Mormon Biography
Mormonism and Social Practice in Nineteenth-Century France
2D
2E
2F
2G
2H
session
session
Kate Holbrook
Chair LDS Church History Dept
Barbara Morgan & Devan Jensen Brigham Young University
Line Upon Line: Joseph Smith’s Growing Understanding of Families and Heaven
Laura Harris Hales Layton, UT
Legal Briefs or Pastorals?: The LDS Church’s Three Official Statements on Marriage and Family
Jennifer Brinkerhoff-Platt
session
Rogert Minert
Chair and Discussant Brigham Young University
session
Andrew Reed
Chair and Discussant Brigham Young University
session
Martha Bradley-Evans Chair and Discussant University of Utah
Elizabeth Emery Chair and Discussant Montclair State U
Katherine Kitterman
Mason Allred
John P. Hatch
Daryl Lee
Undaunted: Austrian Mormon Experience
Dr. Hirschell and Mr. Hyde: Restorationism, Descendancy, and Orson Hyde’s Shifting Jewish Identity
Lorenzo Snow: The Prophet of Paradox
Devery Anderson
Mormonism as a Secte Rouges in 19th-Century French Thought
Willard Richards: Crafting a Life
Heather Belnap Jensen
Texas Christian University
Jon Sillito
Promised Gatherings to Promised Lands: Mormon Gatherings, Early Zionism, and Orson Hyde’s 1840 Mission to Jerusalem
B.H. Roberts: Defender and Advocate of Mormonism
Romantic Socialism, La Nouvelle Femme, and Representations of Mormon Women in Nineteenth-Century French Art and Literature
American University
Connie Lamb
Brigham Young University
A New Chapter: Recent History of the LDS Church in Turkey
Ronald Watt
West Valley City Historical Society
Arther Gaeth: The Making of a Mission President for Czechoslovakia, 1926-1929
Provo, UT
LDS Church History Dept
Brett D. Dowdle
Signature Books
Signature Books
Weber State University
Brigham Young University
Dangerous Similarities: Mormons in Nineteenth-Century French Fiction
A Great Trek to Zion: Manifestations, Movements, and Meanings of the LDS Presence in the Holy Land, 1841-1989
Jenny Reeder
LDS Church History Department
Brigham Young University
Corry Cropper
Amber Taylor Brandeis University
Latter-day Saint Discourse on Eternal Families, 1844-2015: A Cultural Perspective
Brigham Young University
Comments
WASATCH B
MAGPIE B
WASATCH A
2:00 - 3:30
MAGPIE A
WHITE PINE
FRIDAY 10 JUNE
18
4:00 - 5:00 Author Meets Critics: A Panel Discussion of Hokulani Aikau’s A Chosen People, A Promised Land: Mormonism and Race in Hawai’i (University of Minnesota Press, 2012)
3A session
Stanley Thayne
Chair Univ at North Carolina
Panelists Sujey Vega
Arizona State University
Elise Boxer
University of South Dakota
Author-Respondent Hokulani K. Aikau
University of Hawai’i, Mānoa
PRIMROSE A
4:00 - 5:00
4:00 - 5:00
4:00 - 5:00
The Intellectual and Theological World of Early Mormonism
Faith and Science: The Intersection of Mormonism and Eugenics
The Granite Mountain Records Vault
3B
3C
3D
session
session
Terryl Givens
Chair and Discussant University of Richmond
Michael MacKay
Chair and Discussant Brigham Young University
session
Reid L. Neilson
Chair LDS Church History Dept
John Rogers
Cassandra L. Clark
Presenters
Latter-day Milton: Speculations on an Early Mormon Reading Practice
Legitimizing Whiteness: John A. Widtsoe’s Correspondence with Eugenic Scientists in the Early Twentieth Century
Joseph P. Monsen
Yale University
University of Utah
Ian Barber
University of Otago
A New Chapter to Us: A Novel View of Joseph Smith’s 1820s Work as a Seer from a Sympathetic Non-Mormon Reminiscence
LDS Church History Dept
John H. Heath LDS Church History Dept
Gregory Seppi
Brigham Young University
’Our Interest in Eugenics’: The Latter-day Saints and Early 20th Century Perceptions of Race and Class
PRIMROSE B
1 0 :43: 0 0- -1 25 : 0 0
MAYBIRD
MAGPIE A
FRIDAY 10 JUNE
19
SPECIAL EVENTS 4:00 - 5:00 4:00 - 5:00
4:00 - 5:00
4:00 - 5:00
Strangers in the Borderlands: An Unlikely Tale from the Mormon Mexican Colonies
Leonard Arrington and the History Division: Lessons to be Learned
Fundamentalist Mormon Apostolic United Brethren
3F
3G
3E session
session
Barbara Jones Brown Chair and Discussant South Jordan UT
John Gonzalez Draper, UT
session
Benjamin E. Park Chair Unversity of Missouri
Gregory Prince Potomac, MD
3H session
Janet Bennion
Chair and Discussant Lyndon State College
Joe Jessop Hamilton, MT
Dale Van Atta
Blair Hodges
6:30 - 8:15 Awards Banquet Room: Total Ballroom
8:30 - 10:30 Student Reception Room: Golden Cliff
Chair and Discussant Brigham Young Unversity
Doug Stringham Utah Valley University
Anne Leahy
Ashburn, VA
MAGPIE B
‘That They May Dwell In a Place of Their Own’: The Evolution of Deaf Latter-day Saint Worship and Gathering Places
Salt Lake City, UT
WASATCH A
MAGPIE A
4:00 - 5:00
WHITE PINE
FRIDAY EVENING
SATURDAY 11 JUNE
20 SPECIAL EVENTS
7:30 - 8:30 Mormon Women’s History Initiative Team Breakfast
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
The Book of Mormon: New Views of an Old Text
Joseph Smith, Josephine Lyon, and the Puzzles of Nauvoo Polyandry
Contested Memories of the 1838 Missouri-Mormon War
9:00 - 10:00 Smith-Pettit Lecture
4A
4B
4C
Room: Golden Cliff
Grant Wacker Duke Divinity School
Reckoning with History: Richard Bushman, George Marsden, and the Art of Biography
session
Rosalynde Frandsen Welch Chair & Discussant St Louis MO
session
Merina Smith
Chair and Discussant San Diego, CA
session
Alexander L. Baugh Chair Brigham Young University
Samuel Brown
Don Bradley
David W. Grua
‘To Read the Sound of Eternity’: Speech, Text, and Scripture in the Book of Mormon
Did Joseph Smith Father Josephine Lyon? The Historical Evidence on a Reputed Child of Nauvoo Polyandry
Joseph Smith’s 1838-1839 Missouri Jail Letters and Mormon Persecution Memory
Utah State University
University of Utah
Terryl Givens
Ugo Perego
University of Richmond
The Book of Mormon and the Reshaping of Covenant Theology
University of Perugia
Was Joseph Smith the Biological Father of Josephine Lyon? The Genetic Evidence
Brian Hales
John Whitmer Historical Assoc.
Polyandry and the ‘Offer’ Mentioned in D&C 132:51
LDS Church History Dept
Brent M. Rogers LDS Church History Dept
Gendered Memories of the 1838 Missouri War
Andrea G. Radke-Moss Brigham Young University-Idaho
Sexual Violence and the Practices of Memory: Competing Constructions of the Missouri Rapes in LDS and non-LDS Discourses
Steven C. Harper LDS Church History Dept
Comments
BALLROOM
PRIMROSE A
PRIMROSE B
1 0 : 3 0 - 1 2 : 0 01 0 : 3 0 - 1 2 : 0 0
MAYBIRD
SATURDAY 11 JUNE
21 10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
10:30 - 12:00
On Active Duty: The Utah War’s Women at Home and Afield
Peoples, Places, and Businesses in Territorial Utah
Women Writers and the Practice of Mormonism
Practicing 21st Century Research
Mormon Uniqueness and Identity Formation
4D
4E
4F
4G
4H
session
session
Barbara Morgan Chair and Discussant
session
Thomas Alexander Chair and Discussant Brigham Young University
session
Lisa Olsen Tait
Chair and Discussant LDS Church History Dept
session
Jonathan Murphy
Chair and Discussant Brigham Young University
Christine Talbot
Chair and Discussant U. of Northern Colorado
Kenneth L. Alford
Larry King
Saskia Tielens
Gerrit van Dyk
George Ryskamp
The Utah War’s 1858 Move South Viewed through Women’s Eyes
Analyzing the Success of ZCMI in Pioneer Utah
Online Tools for Mormon Research
Audrey M. Godfrey
Linda Hunter Adams
’When Men Were Men and Women Were Women’: An Exploration of the Regency Romance Novel in a Mormon Context
Meliton Gonzalez Trejo: A Former Catholic and Mormon Temple Rites
Brigham Young University
Independent Scholar
Lifeline by Mail: Utah War Letters From the Field and Home Front
William P. MacKinnon
Orem, UT
Brigham Young University
Archibald Gardner’s Lumber Mills in Big and Little Cottonwood Canyons
Independent Scholar
Rescued or Kidnapped: The Trans-Atlantic Saga of Henrietta Polydore
Robert Haven Briggs Fullerton, CA
Ira Hatch: Mountain Meadows Militiaman, Indian Scout, Explorer and Colonizer on the Mormon Frontier
WASATCH B
MAGPIE B
TU Dortmund
Sarah Reed
University of Wisconsin-Madison
Polygamy and Postmemory: Virginia Sorensen’s Utah Novels
Scott Hales
Brigham Young University
Ryan Leavitt Combs
LDS Church History Dept
Online Tools from the LDS Church History Library
Trevor Alvord
Brigham Young University
Preserving the Future of History: BYU’s Web Archive
LDS Church History Dept
The Poet and the Apostle: The Correspondence of Ina Coolbrith and Joseph F. Smith
WASATCH A
10:30 - 12:00
MAGPIE A
Brigham Young University
Taylor Kerby
Claremont Graduate U
In the World, but Not of It: The Drive for Mormon Uniqueness
Cristina M. Rosetti U of California, Riverside
‘The Glory of God is Intelligence’: The Centrality of Religious Education in Mormon Identity Formation
WASATCH B
SATURDAY 11 JUNE
22 12:30 - 2:00 Lunch
LUNCH ON YOUR OWN or PRE- ORDERED LUNCH from SNOWBIRD Pre-ordered Lunches picked up in Ballroom lobby
2:30 - 4:00
2:30 - 4:00
2:30 - 4:00
Ezra Taft Benson and the Rise of American Conservativism after 1960
YouTube as Historical Archive for Lived Religion and Digital Pedagogy
The Practice of Mormon Mothering
5A
5B
5C
session
session
Robert A. Goldberg Chair & Discussant University of Utah
session
Joseph Stuart
Chair and Discussant University of Utah
Newell G. Bringhurst
Jeff Turner
Ezra Taft Benson’s Quest for the U.S. Presidency
Deconversion Narratives in the Internet Age: The ‘I am an Ex-Mormon’ Campaign
Visalia, CA
Matthew L. Harris Colorado State U, Pueblo
University of Utah
John C. Feinauer
Chair Lewis and Clark College
Emily January Petersen Utah State University
Mother’s Work: Organizing Mormon Motherhood in the Early Twentieth Century
Ezra Taft Benson, Martin Luther King and the ‘Communist Conspiracy’
University of Utah
Patrick Q. Mason
Jordan F. Bratt
Dave Hall
Twentieth-Century Environmental Politics in the Mormon Culture Region
Searching for Mormonism: Digital Religion in the Age of YouTube
Changing Realities for Mormon Women: The Gospel Literacy Effort During the Presidency of Elaine L. Jack
Claremont Graduate University
YouTube Mormonism: Arguing the Case of Mormon Fundamentalism
George Mason University
Kristine L. Wright Independent Scholar
’You are Hereby Called to Serve’: Opening the White Envelope, Performance and Collective Identity
PRIMROSE A
12:30 - 2:00
Susanna Morrill
PRIMROSE B
10:30 - 12:00 2:30 - 4:00
Kate Holbrook
LDS Church History Dept
Mothers at Work: A Look at the 1970s
California State U, Fullerton
Claudia Bushman Columbia University
Comments
MAYBIRD
SATURDAY 11 JUNE
23 2:30 - 4:00
2:30 - 4:00
2:30 - 4:00
2:30 - 4:00
2:30 - 4:00
The Book of Mormon in Historical and Comparative Perspectives
Sacred Geography, Sacred Artifacts, Sacred Sites
The Public Side of Mormon Distinctiveness, 1831-49
Mormonism and Religious Sensibility
5D
5E
Mormon Feminist Social Networks in the Late Twentieth and Early Twenty-First Centuries
5G
5H
session
session
Ryan G. Tobler
Chair and Discussant Harvard University
5F session
Emily Utt
Chair and Discussant LDS Church History Dept
session
Christine Duncan Chair Dixie State University
session
Brent M. Rogers
Chair and Discussant LDS Church History Dept
Samuel Brown
Chair and Discussant University of Utah
Stephen J. Fleming
Jared Call
Kari Waters
J er em y J . C hat elain
Justin Bray
When Did Joseph Smith Know What He Knew? Hints at Pre-Existence, Deification, and Eternal Marriage in the Book of Mormon
The Geography of the Dissenters
Mormon Feminist Social Networks in the Age of Newsletters and Phone Calls
The Practice and Practicing of Mormon Agenda Setting in the Times and Seasons, 1839-1842
The Nose Knows: Mormons, Smell, and Sensory History
Fallbrook, CA
Janiece Johnson
Brigham Young University-Idaho
Becoming A People of the Books: Early Mormon Converts and the New Word of the Lord
Taunalyn Ford Rutherford
Claremont Graduate University
Book of Mormon and Bhagavad Gita: Latter-day Saint Practice of ‘Translation’ in India
Utah State University
Charlotte Hansen Terry
Houston, TX
University of Utah
Scott C. Esplin
Brigham Young University
Changing Their Practice: Latter-day Saint and Reorganized Church Approaches to Historical Interpretation in Nauvoo, Illinois
Randal Powell
Claremont Graduate U
LDS Church History Dept
Documents and Properties for Furs: Wilford C. Wood and the Preservation of Church History
University of Utah
Anja Tinajero
Andrew H. Hedges
The Rise of Women’s Blogs in the Early Twenty-First Century: Mormon Feminism, Secular Feminism, and Mormon Mommies
Practice in the Papers: News from Utah, 1847-49
Morelos, Mexico
Gina Colvin
University of Canterbury
Mormon Feminist Storytelling Through Podcasting
Nancy Ross
Brigham Young University
’Beyond the Veil’: The Spirit World of Popular Mormonism
Nathaniel Wiewora Harding University
Gerrit J. Dirkmaat Brigham Young University
Agriculture, Adversaries, and Apostasy: Joseph Smith’s Unpublished Revelation and the Conflict Over Frederick G. Williams’ Consecrated Farm
‘Extreme Force of Language and Energy of Action’: Antebellum Evangelicals and the Fanaticisms of Mormonism
Dixie State University
Comments
Andrew C. Reed
Brigham Young University
Finding Pathways and Practices for Religious Tolerance in Early Mormonism
WASATCH B
MAGPIE B
WASATCH A
2:30 - 4:00
MAGPIE A
WHITE PINE
SATURDAY 11 JUNE
24 4:30 - 5:30 The Legal World of Early and Contemporary Mormonism
4:30 - 5:30
4:30 - 5:30
4:30 - 5:30
The Elections and Travels of Church Leaders in the Twentieth Century
Mormonism and World Leaders
A Close Look at William B. Smith: In the Shadow of a Prophet
6A
6B
6C
6D
session
session
Nate Oman
Chair & dDscussant College of William and Mary
session
Gregory Prince Chair & Discussant Potomac, MD
session
Jeff Johnson
Chair and Discussant Utah Historical Society
John S. Dinger
Kenneth L. Cannon II
Ardis E. Parshall
Mormons and the Jury in Hancock County, 1839-1845
Separation of Prophet and State? The 1914 Reelection of Reed Smoot
‘The Matter is Having My Close Attention’: Discoveries into Winston Churchill’s Investigation of Mormonism in Britain
Meridian, ID
Kif Augustine-Adams Brigham Young University
Salt Lake City, UT
Reid L. Neilson
LDS Church History Dept
BYU, Civil Rights, and Religious Exemption to Title IX
‘A Fine Intellectual and Spiritual Opportunity’: Church Historian Leonard J. Arrington’s Tour of the LDS Church’s Asian Area General Conferences, August 1975
PRIMROSE A
PRIMROSE B
Keepapitchinin
Gary James Bergera Smith-Pettit Foundation
Glen Leonard Chair Farmington UT
P r e s e n te rs : H . M i c h a e l Ma rq u a rd t Sandy, UT
Megan Falater
University of Wisconsin, Madison
Response: Kyle Walker
Brigham Young University-Idaho
Ezra Taft Benson Meets Nikita Khrushchev, 1959: Memory Embellished
1 04 : 3 0 - 15 2: 3: 0 0
MAYBIRD
WHITE PINE
SATURDAY 11 JUNE
25 SPECIAL EVENTS 4:30 - 5:30
4:30 - 5:30
4:30 - 5:30
4:30 - 5:30
Teaching Mormon History: Pedagogy Workshop
Nathaniel Baldwin and the Spread of Early Fundamentalist Mormonism
The Practice of Mormon Missionary Work
6E
6F
Restriction-ism Unveiled! A Workshop on Research Access and Intellectual Property at the Church History Library
session
session
Benjamin E. Park Chair University of Missouri
Laurie Maffly-Kipp Washington U in St. Louis
W. Paul Reeve University of Utah
Andrea Radke-Moss
Brigham Young University-Idaho
6G session
David Watson
Chair Independent Scholar
6H session
Keith A. Erekson
Session Leader Director, LDS Church History Library
Melissa Inouye
Chair and Comment University of Auckland
Craig L. Foster
Matthew McBride
Like Sparks of a Wildfire: The Spread of Early Fundamentalist Mormonism
‘An Ardent Desire to Speak Myself’: Early Women Missionaries and Gendered Separate Spheres
Ma r ia n n e T. Wa ts o n
Kari Lynne Roueche
Nathaniel Baldwin: Key Figure in the Emergence of the Fundamentalist Mormon Community
Missionary Experiences in Great Britain after the Call to Zion
Layton, UT
LDS Church History Dept
Lehi, UT
7:00 - 9:00 Presidential Banquet Room: Total Ballroom
MHA Presidential Address by President Laurie Maffly-Kipp “The Clock and the Compass: Mormon History in Motion”
9:00 - 10:00
Closing Reception
Room: Total Ballroom or Golden Cliff
Kingsport, TN
Ken Driggs
Independent Scholar
Comments
MAGPIE B
WASATCH A
WASATCH B
4:30 - 5:30
MAGPIE A
--
CONFERENCE SUPPORT/SPECIAL GIVING 26
We express our sincere appreciation to those who generously give to the Mormon History Association, a 501(c)3 non-profit organization.
BENEFACTORS OF MHA AWARDS AND SPECIAL GIVING Curtis T. Atkisson Jr. Christian K. and Julianna B. Barney Ronald O. and Marilyn S. Barney Gary James Bergera and Turner Family Christopher Talmage Jones Family G Kevin Jones The Harley Foundation Gerald E. Jones
Gregory A. and JaLynn Prince Patricia Lyn Scott family Religious Studies Center, BYU Smith-Pettit Foundation Joseph H. and Julia Todd Dawn P Thurston and Morris A Thurston Lola Van Wagenen and George Burrill Gail S. and Kim Wilson
2016 CONFERENCE SPONSORS Opening Reception: Charles Redd Center for Western Studies, BYU Durham Jones & Pinegar/Ken Cannon and Connie Holbrook Gary Payne (Closing Reception)
Mormon Studies, Claremont Graduate University(Student Recept) Church History and Doctrine Department, BYU(Student Recept) Neil A. Maxwell Institute (Conference Bags)
DONOR MEMBERSHIP ($500) Michael Byrne Gregory Christofferson Armand L. and Ruth Mauss
Rob & Arlene Racker Edwina and Marcellus Snow Morris A. and Dawn Thurston
Karen and Joseph Torgesen Laurel Thatcher and Gael Ulrich
PATRON MEMBERSHIP ($275) Newell and Mary Ann Bringhurst Brian and Anna Lea Cannon Jill Mulvay and Brooklyn Derr
Nancy and Omar Kader Glen M. and Karen Leonard Ron Priddis
Lisa Olson and John Tait Sam and Judy Weston
SUSTAINING MEMBERSHIP ($150) Polly Aird Paul L. Anderson Sherry P. and William Baker Gordon Bissegger Barbara Jones Brown Aileen Clyde Steven Crump Stephen & Daryl Eccles Layle Erickson Sherman Feher Lawrence and Julia Foster
Geraldine and Ken Hanni John Harrington John Hatch Susan and David Howard Richard L. and Dorothy Jensen Val and Joyce Kessler Lynn Lonsdale Jennifer and Anthony Lund William MacKinnon Kahlile and Marolyn Mehr Christopher and April Newton
Thomas D. & Kaaren Parkes Waldo and Angela Perkins Anna and Frank Rolapp Susan Sessions Rugh David and Natalie Tanner Myrna Taylor Richard and Sue Thomas Georgia Beth Thompson Richard Thornton
27
Our sincere thanks fo the many who have contributed to the success of this conference. The Program Committee listed on page 4, co-chaired by Melissa Inouye and Ben Park has crafted a remarkable lineup. Much follow-up is always required and the committee has performed most ably and diligently. Our Local Arrangements Committee, co-chaired by Anne Barrett, Jenny Reeder and Emily Utt have tackled with zeal a very complex and multi-faceted conference plan. The result is a remarkable opportunity for MHA attendees to enjoy to their fullest the conference offerings, excellent facilities, food and beauties of Snowbird and the Salt Lake City area, through tours and workshops. We have witnessed the great generosity of contributors who have given money to fund the Opening, Student and Closing receptions. Many students each year delivering papers have had their travel augmented by the Student Travel Fund. There have been other conference expenses, including our entertainment, certain meals, and devotionals that others have stepped up, contributing to an enjoyable and entertaining conference. For our exhibitors and advertisers whose financial support and loyalty can’t be overstated, we ask you to support these exhibitors by purchasing their fine products and patronizing their kindred organizations and publications. Of course, there is no conference without the scores of presenters who have engaged in research, the assembly of their investigation, and the writing and delivery of their papers and panel discussions. For the session chairs and commenters who add so much to our unique format and interest in the sessions. The 2016 Snowbird Conference must go down as one of the finest and most diverse presented in recent memory. MHA is so very appreciative to all those who have participated and added so much to fostering the study and presentation of Mormon history. We also want to thank again and recognize the generosity of the award sponsors for their funding of the MHA Awards and enabling our organization in carrying out it’s mission. The many committees that serve the organization, all voluntarily have added so much to the success of the conference. In the absence of such devotion and commitment, MHA goes nowhere. We also express thanks to the MHA Officers and Board for their tireless work in helping to plan and execute not only the conference but also the ongoing work of MHA.
Mormon History Association 52nd Annual Conference 28 Call for Papers 2017 ST. LOUIS, MISSOURI “CROSSING AND DWELLING IN MORMON HISTORY” The fifty-second annual conference of the Mormon History Association will be held June 1-4, 2017, at the St. Charles Convention Center in the St. Louis, Missouri metro area. The 2017 conference theme, “Crossing and Dwelling in Mormon History,” borrows concepts from religious studies scholar Thomas A. Tweed, who argues that religion is simultaneously in motion and in place. The theme seeks to capture both St. Louis’s general history and Latter-day Saint connections to the city’s past. St. Louis was founded by fur traders in 1764. The territory in which St. Louis was located was governed by Spanish and French authorities prior to the 1803 Louisiana Purchase, after which it became part of the United States. The city’s geographical position on the Mississippi and Missouri Rivers ensured that St. Louis would be an important trade center and a launching point for westward migration. In the twentieth century, the city’s historic status as the Gateway to the West was made tangible when St. Louis hosted the World’s Fair in 1904 (held partly to honor the centennial of the Louisiana Purchase) and the construction of the famous Gateway Arch in 1965. The conference theme, “Crossing and Dwelling in Mormon History,” seeks to capture the essence of Mormon connections with St. Louis’s history. As early as 1831, Oliver Cowdery and his companions passed through the city on their way to the Indian territory. In subsequent years, many Saints, including Joseph Smith, stopped in St. Louis as they traveled between the Mormon settlements in Missouri and Ohio. In 1839, the inhabitants of St. Louis welcomed Latter-day Saint refugees fleeing Governor Lilburn W. Boggs’s infamous “extermination order.” Within a decade, as conditions in Illinois deteriorated, many Mormons again found a safe haven in St. Louis. From the 1840s through the late 1860s, thousands of European converts passed through the city on their way first to Nauvoo and then the Great Basin. In the 1850s, the semi-permanent Mormon population in St. Louis had grown to the point that the Utah church established a stake in the city for a few years, until the stake was discontinued during the Utah War in 1857. The Reorganized Church (now Community of Christ) maintained a prospering branch in St. Louis during the second half of the nineteenth century, with Joseph Smith III presiding over two General Conferences in the city in 1869 and 1872. In the twentieth century, both major manifestations of the Restoration have claimed significant presences in St. Louis. The program committee invites proposals that address the conference theme of “Crossing and Dwelling in Mormon History.” How has the practice of “gathering” tied the various Restoration traditions to specific places, and how have those places been connected with the broader society? How have the various traditions of Mormonism crossed from one place to another, both literally and figuratively? How have ideas and practices remained constant or changed over time? Although the program committee is especially interested in papers that address the theme, all proposals will be considered. A strong preference will be given to proposals for complete panels, meaning a chair, three presenters, and a commentator. Sessions including international presenters (in person or via teleconference), and creative formats such as roundtables, performances, film screenings, or other experimental arrangements, are particularly encouraged. Please send 1) a 300 word abstract for each paper or presentation and 2) a brief 1-2 page CV for each presenter, including email contact information. Session proposals should also include the session title and a 300 word session abstract, along with a confirmed chair and/or commentator, if applicable. Previously published papers are not eligible for presentation at MHA. An individual may only submit one proposal as a session presenter, although it is acceptable for a presenter in one session to be a chair or commentator in another. Limited financial assistance is available to some student presenters and presenters from less economically-developed nations. Those who wish to apply for funding should include estimated travel expenses with their proposals. The deadline for all proposals is October 1, 2016. Proposals should be sent by email to the program co-chairs, David Grua and Janiece Johnson, at mhaconference2017 AT gmail DOT com. Notification of acceptance or rejection will be made by December 15, 2016. David W. Grua, LDS Church History Department, Co-Chair Janiece Johnson, Brigham Young University-Idaho, Co-Chair Devery Anderson, Signature Books Rebecca De Schweinitz, Brigham Young University-Provo John Hamer, Community of Christ Christopher Jones, The College of William and Mary Amy Tanner Thiriot, Independent Historian Saskia Thielens, TU Dortmund, Dortmund, Germany
AWARDS 29 LE O N ARD J. ARRINGTON A WA R D
B E S T A R T I C L E O N M O R M O N W O M E N ' S H I S T O RY ( $350)
Awarded annually to a scholar whose contributions are truly outstanding for distinguished service to Mormon history. The selection committee will consider the influence of certain individual works by nominees for this award, as well as their cumulative records of meritorious scholarship in general. Awarded since 1999, this award is named and given in memory and recognition of a founding father of the Mormon History Association and premier mentor and promoter of Mormon history. This award replaces the Grace Fort Arrington Award for Historical Excellence that was offered from 1981 through 1998.
B E S T BOOK AWARD ($ 2 ,0 0 0 ) Sp o n s o r ed b y : Cur t i s T. A t kisson
Awarded for the best book published on Mormon history. Given to honor and encourage the sense of purpose, dedication, excellence of study, research and scholarship in the field of Mormon history. Funded by Curtis T. Atkisson in memory of his wife, Mary Ann Atkisson, a lover of history, an accomplished artist, and MHA member.
B E S T BIOGRAPHY ($1 ,0 0 0 )
Sp o n s o r ed b y : Tur n e r a n d Bergera Families A warded for the best published biography in the field of Mormon history. Funded in honor of Ella Larsen Turner, a published historian and genealogist,and her daughter, Ella Ruth Turner Bergera, a published family historian, novelist, and poet.
B E S T FIRST BOOK ($1 ,2 0 0 )
Sp o n s o r ed b y : The Ha r t l ey Foundation Aw a rd e d bi e n n i al l y f or an a uthor’s first book published on Mormon history.
B E S T DOCUMENTARY HISTOR Y/B IB LIOGR A PH Y ( $ 1 ,2 0 0 ) Awarded biennially for the best published book of documentary editing or bibliography on Mormon History. Funded in remembrance of the Ronald and Marilyn Barneys’ Mormon ancestors.
B E S T INTERNAT IONAL B OOK A WA R D ( $ 1 ,2 0 0 ) Aw a rd e d bi e n n i al l y f or t h e best book on international Mormon history
B E S T PERSONAL HIST OR Y/M EM OIR A WA R D
( $ 1 ,2 0 0 )
Sp o n s o r ed b y : Dawn P a r r e t t Thurston and Morris Ashcroft Thurston
Awarded biennially for the best published Mormon memoir or personal history. Funded in honor of Barbara Ashcroft Thurston and Morris Alma Thurston, whose dedication to preserving family history and genealogy was an inspiration to their childrens’ mission to promote well-written and compelling personal life stories.
B E S T ARTICLE AW ARD ( $ 5 0 0 )
Sp o n s o r ed b y : The Ha r t l ey Foundation
Awarded for the best published article on Mormon history. Funded by the Hartley Foundation to honor noted Mormon historian William G. Hartley.
A R TI CLE AW ARDS OF EXC ELLEN C E ( $ 3 5 0 ) Sp o n s o r ed b y : The J ones F amily
Aw a rd e d i n memor y o f Ch r istopher Talmage Jones, a MHA member for nearly fo rt y y e a r s wh o dedi c at e d much of his life to the preservation and s cholarship o f M o rmon h i st o r y .
Sponsored by: Mormon Women's History Initiative Team
Awarded for an outstanding article on the experiences of Mormon women in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Sponsored by the Mormon Women’s History Initiative Team (MWHIT), an independent group of scholars from around the United States who encourage research, writing, and publications on Mormon women’s history.
B E S T I N T E R N A T I O N A L A R T I C L E A W A R D ($350) Sponsored by: Joseph and Julia Todd
Awarded for the best article on international Mormon history (in print or online journals), in honor of Andrew Jenson, Assistant LDS Church Historian, for his outstanding contribution in documenting nearly every LDS congregation around the world.
B E S T D I S S E R T A T I O N A W A R D ($800) Sponsored by: Gerald Edward Jones
Awarded for the best doctoral dissertation on a Mormon historical theme. Funded in honor and memory of the many students of Gerald R. Jones, who served for many years as an administrator and instructor for the LDS Church Educational System.
B E S T T H E S I S A W A R D ($500) Sponsored by: Gregory A. Prince
A ward for the best master’s thesis on a Mormon hist orical theme. Funded in honor of Lester E. Bush who served for five years as Associate Editor of Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought and wrote many articles and one book. His most noteworthy achievement was a Dialogue article published in 1973 on blacks and the priesthood. He spent his career as a physician working for the federal government and is now retired.
B E S T G R A D U A T E P A P E R ($400) Sponsored by: Lola Van Wagenen
The Best Graduate Paper is funded to honor Juanita Brooks for her life of dedication, scholarship and for the courage with which she led the way in an honest and professional approach to the study of the Mormon past.
S T U D E N T R E S E A R C H P A P E R A W A R D S O F M E RI T ( $300 TO E ACH RECIPIENT) Sponsored by: G. Kevin Jones
One of MHA’s primary objectives - fostering research and publication of Mormon history - is met by encouraging young scholars in undergraduate and graduate programs to participate in the process. In November 2013, long-time MHA member G. Kevin Jones agreed to fund an annual student paper competition at the university level. Kevin’s generosity has allowed for an expansion of this kind of competition from to seven universities with programs specific to Mormon studies. This award is given in honor of Professor Davis Bitton.
SPECIAL CITATION Presented to persons or institutions who have made a significant contribution to Mormon history .
BYU Religious Studies Center Edited by Reid L. Neilson and R. Mark Melville, A Historian in Zion tells the story of Andrew Jenson, who served as Assistant Church Historian of the LDS Church for over forty his personal journals and church records to help tell the story of the Restoraimportant window into the Mormon past. ISBN: 978-1-9443-9400-4 Retail: $39.99
Written by Michael Hubbard MacKay, Sacred Space sorts through the complicated history of where the Church was established and illuminates what the sacredness of a place means for modern-day members. ISBN: 978-0-8425-2979-2, Retail: $14.99
President Uchtdorf ’s keynote address begins this compilation of scholarly papers presented at the BYU Church History Symposium.
Mormon exodus from Nauvoo to a new mountain home “far away in the West.”
and text that traces the unique details that help tell the stories of each of Provo’s two temples.
ISBN: 978-0-8425-2973-0 Retail: $31.99
ISBN: 978-0-8425-2969-3 Retail: $27.99
ISBN: 978-0-8425-2965-5 Retail: $29.99
rsc.byu.edu/recent
PAST PRESIDENTS AND CONFERENCES 34 MHA PRESIDENTS 2015-2016 2014-2015 2013-2014 2012-2013 2011-2012 2010-2011 2009-2010 2008-2009 2007-2008 2006-2007 2005-2006 2004-2005 2003-2004 2002-2003 2001-2002 2000-2001 1999-2000 1998-1999 1997-1998 1996-1997 1995-1996 1994-1995 1993-1994 1992-1993 1991-1992 1990-1991 1989-1990 1988-1989 1987-1988 1986-1987 1985-1986 1984-1985 1983-1984 1982-1983 1981-1982 1980-1981 1979-1980 1978-1979 1977-1978 1976-1977 1975-1976 1974-1975 1973-1974 1972-1973 1971-1972 1970-1971 1969-1970 1968-1969 1967-1968 1966-1967
LAURIE MAFFLY-KIPP LAUREL THATCHER ULRICH RICHARD E. BENNETT GLEN M. LEONARD RICHARD L. JENSEN WILLIAM P. MACKINNON RONALD E. ROMIG KATHRYN M. DAYNES PAUL L. ANDERSON RONALD K. ESPLIN PHILIP L. BARLOW DONALD Q. CANNON MARTHA SONNTAG BRADLEY LAWRENCE FOSTER DEAN L. MAY (DEC.) WILLIAM G. HARTLEY NEWELL G. BRINGHURST JILL MULVAY DERR ARMAND L. MAUSS LINDA KING NEWELL DAVID J. WHITTAKER MARIO S. DE PILLIS ROGER D. LAUNIUS MARVIN S. HILL RONALD W. WALKER (DEC.) RICHARD P. HOWARD CAROL CORNWALL MADSEN STANLEY B. KIMBALL (DEC.) VALEEN TIPPETTS AVERY (DEC.) RICHARD W. SADLER RICHARD L. BUSHMAN MAUREEN URSENBACH BEECHER KENNETH W. GODFREY WILLIAM D. RUSSELL MELVIN T. SMITH DEAN C. JESSEE JAN SHIPPS MILTON BACKMAN JR. DOUGLAS D. ALDER PAUL M. EDWARDS CHARLES S. PETERSON THOMAS G. ALEXANDER REED C. DURHAM JR. JAMES B. ALLEN DAVIS BITTON (DEC.) RICHARD D. POLL (DEC.) S. GEORGE ELLSWORTH (DEC.) T. EDGAR LYON (DEC.) EUGENE E. CAMPBELL (DEC.) LEONARD J. ARRINGTON (DEC.)
MHA CONFERENCES 2016 51 ST SNOWBIRD, UTAH 2015 50 TH PROVO, UTAH 2014 49 TH SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS 2013 48 TH LAYTON, UTAH 2012 47 TH CALGARY, ALBERTA, CANADA 2011 46 TH ST. GEORGE, UTAH 2010 45 TH INDEPENDENCE, MISSOURI 2009 44 TH SPRINGFI ELD, ILLINOIS 2008 43 RD SACRAMENTO, CALIFORNIA 2007 42 ND SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 2006 41 ST CASPER, WYOMING 2005 40 TH KILLINGTON, VERMONT 2004 39 TH PROVO, UTAH 2003 38 TH KIRTLAND/CLEVELAND, OHIO 2002 37 TH TUCSON, ARIZONA 2001 36 TH CEDAR CITY, UTAH 2000 35 TH AALBORG, DENMARK 1999 34 TH OGDEN, UTAH 1998 33 RD WASHINGTON, D.C. 1997 32 ND OMAHA, NEBRASKA 1996 31 ST SNOWBIRD, UTAH 1995 30 TH KINGSTON, ONTARIO, CANADA 1994 29 TH PARK CITY, UTAH 1993 28 TH LAMONI, IOWA 1992 27 TH ST. GEORGE, UTAH 1991 26 TH CLAREMONT, CALIFORNIA 1990 25 TH LAIE, HAWAII 1989 24 TH QUINCY, ILLINOIS 1988 23 RD LOGAN, UTAH 1987 22 ND OXFORD, ENGLAND 1986 21 ST SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 1985 20 TH INDEPENDENCE, MISSOURI 1984 19 TH PROVO, UTAH 1983 18 TH OMAHA, NEBRASKA 1982 17 TH OGDEN, UTAH 1981 16 TH REXBURG, IDAHO 1980 15 TH CANANDAIGUA, NEW YORK 1979 14 TH LAMONI, IOWA 1978 13 TH LOGAN, UTAH 1977 12 TH KIRTLAND, OHIO 1976 11 TH ST. GEORGE, UTAH 1975 10 TH PROVO, UTAH 1974 9 TH NAUVOO, ILLINOIS 1973 8 TH SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH 1972 7 TH INDEPENDENCE, MISSOURI 1971 6 TH PROVO, UTAH 1970 5 TH LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA 1969 4 TH SAN DIEGO, CALIFORNIA 1968 3 RD SANTA CLARA, CALIFORNIA 1967 2 ND PALO ALTO, CALIFORNIA 1966 1 ST PORTLAND, OREGON 1965 (ORGANIZED) SAN FRANCISCO, CALIFORNIA
* Don’t want to carry the book home? Use code MHA2016 on our website to receive the discount after the conference. VALID UNTIL JULY 1, 2016
Leonard Arrington and the
Writing of Mormon History Gregory A. Prince The most comprehensive biography of Leonard Arrington to date—a story of scholarship and controversy
$39.95 $31.96
Women and Mormonism Historical and Contemporary Perspectives
Edited by Kate Holbrook and Matthew Bowman A combination of thematic, cultural, and historical approaches to the study of Mormon women
$34.95 $27.96
A Faded Legacy
Amy Brown Lyman and Mormon Women’s Activism, 1872–1959
Directions for Mormon Study in the Twenty-First Century Edited by Patrick Mason
Alma Richards, Olympian Larry R. Gerlach The story of America’s most accomplished
Mormon Studies
win an Olympic gold metal
$29.00 $23.20
$34.95 $27.96 Forthcoming in July
Mormonism and the Making of a British Zion Matthew Lyman Rasmussen
A Kingdom Transformed
Early Mormonism and the Modern LDS Church SECOND EDITION
Dave Hall Social worker, progressive, and activist Amy Mormon women’s lives and concerns
in Britain
Gordon Shepherd and Gary Shepherd
$39.95 $31.96 Forthcoming in July
The evolution of LDS doctrinal emphases explored through content analysis of General Conference rhetoric
$34.95 $27.96
$35.00 $28.00 THE UNIVERSIT Y OF UTAH PRESS INVITES SUBMISSIONS TO THE NEW SERIES
The Mormon Experience in Perspective EDITED BY ROBERT A. GOLDBERG AND W. PAUL REEVE The Juanita Brooks Prize in Mormon Studies $10,000 Biennial Award and Publication Prize The University of Utah Press will announce the winner of the 2015 Brooks Prize at the MHA conference.
in the Monograph subject area of Mormon studies related to history, biography, or culture
emphasize Must research in primary
and secondary sources and quality writing in the tradition of Juanita Brooks
demonstrate Must a commitment to scholarly narrative writing that also appeals to more general readers
DEADLINE: August 1, 2016 Please see our website for complete submission guidelines: www.UofUpress.com.
The Diaries of Amasa M. Lyman | 1832–1877 Scott H. Partridge, editor
Rounding out our spring list with
GLORIOUS IN PERSECUTION
Joseph Smith, American Prophet, 1839–1844 Martha Bradley-Evans ISLAND ADVENTURES
The Hawaiian Mission of Francis A. Hammond, 1851–1865 John J. Hammond THIRTEENTH APOSTLE
The Diaries of Amasa M. Lyman, 1832–1877 (Available June 20) Scott H. Partridge