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Topic: Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought


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 Personal Voices: A Celebration of Dialogue
Wishing to bring their faith into dialogue with the larger stream of Christian thought and with human experience as a whole, a small group of Latter-day Saints founded Dialogue in 1966 as an independent Mormon quarterly.
She is a former editor of Dialogue, and her own articles have appeared in BYU Today, This People, The Deseret News, The Journal of Pastoral Counseling, and elsewhere.
For twenty years Dialogue's editors and contributors have encouraged a variety of viewpoints in expressing Mormon culture the relevance of their religion to secular life.
www.signaturebooks.com /outofprint/personal.htm   (221 words)

  
 Tending the Garden: Essays on Mormon Literature
She is past president of the Association for Mormon Letters, former associate editor of the Ensign magazine, and former associate editor of Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought.
She is the current editor of the Journal of Mormon History and the Mormon Women's Forum Quarterly and is the production editor for the Review of Higher Education.
He is a contributor to Book of Mormon Authorship, Multiply and Replenish: Mormon Essays on Sex and Family, Peculiar People: Mormons and Same-Sex Orientation, Personal Voices: A Celebration of Dialogue, and The Prophet Puzzle: Interpretive Essays on Joseph Smith.
www.signaturebooks.com /tending.htm   (221 words)

  
 Dialogue
DIALOGUE JOURNAL is an independent quarterly established to express Mormon culture and to examine the relevance of religion to secular life.
It is edited by Latter-day Saints who wish to bring their faith into dialogue with the larger stream of world religious thought and with human experience as a whole and to foster artistic and scholarly achievement based on their cultural heritage.
For personal noncommercial use only, users may download and/or print one copy of a page or document made available at http://www.dialoguejournal.com.
www.dialoguejournal.com   (261 words)

  
 Lavina Fielding Anderson - Enpsychlopedia
Her editing credits include Sisters in Spirit: Mormon Women in Historical and Cultural Perspective (1987) and Tending the Garden: Essays on Mormon Literature (1996), as well as the Ensign (magazine), Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Journal of Mormon History, Mormon Women 's Forum Quarterly, and Case Reports of the Mormon Alliance.
Anderson is one of the original trustees of the Mormon Alliance, founded in 1992 to document cases of spiritual and ecclesiastical abuse in the LDS Church.
Anderson remains as active in the LDS Church as her status allows; she has been described by Levi S. Peterson (1996) as exemplary of an emerging "church in exile" composed of faithful excommunicants.
www.grohol.com /psypsych/Lavina_Fielding_Anderson   (261 words)

  
 Mormon Literature Database - Jack-Mormons
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 22.1 (Spring 1989): 132-41
mormonlit.lib.byu.edu /lit_work.php?w_id=3444   (261 words)

  
 Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
Knowlton, David C. (David Clark), 1955-   “Mormonism in an Aymara Context: A Dialogue.” Paper read at “A Mosaic of Mormon Cultures” symposium, Brigham Young University, Provo, Utah, October 1980.
Knowlton, David C. (David Clark), 1955-   “Violence and Mormonism in the Crucible of Social Change: The Cases of Bolivia and Chile.” read at International Conference on New Religions, Recife, Brazil, May 1994.
Foster, Craig L. “From Temple Mormon to Anti-Mormon: The Ambivalent Odyssey of Increase Van Dusen.”
www.dialoguejournal.com /index/kin.asp   (4846 words)

  
 Mormonism Research Ministry - Articles - DNA and the Book of Mormon Record
In the fall 1997 issue of Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, LDS author Brigham Madsen discussed the difficulty that many Latter-day Saints are having with accepting the Book of Mormon as an historical document (Reflections on LDS Disbelief in the Book of Mormon as History).
One of the claims made in the Book of Mormon is that it records the story of a Hebrew man named Lehi who sees in a vision the destruction of Jerusalem around 600 B.C. He then flees with his family to escape the impending onslaught of Babylonian conquerors and eventually sails to the Western hemisphere.
Mormon leaders, apologists, and scholars have been adamant in declaring the Book of Mormon to be actual history.
www.mormonismresearchministry.org /multimedia/text/dna-bom.html   (4058 words)

  
 Dialogue, Vol. 30, No. 4, Winter 1997: FAIR LDS Bookstore
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Spring 1997, 6x9" softbound, 200 pages.
A Response to "The Dilemma of the Mormon Rationalist", Allen D. Roberts
The Dilemma of the Mormon Rationalist, Robert D. Anderson
www.fair-lds.org /Merchant2/merchant.mvc?page=FOS/PROD/S-30_4   (4058 words)

  
 Adherents.com
"LDS Prospects in Italy for the Twenty-first Century " in Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought (Spring 1996); pg.
One sect that especially profited from this development was the Way of Supreme Peace (T'ai-p'ing tao), founded by Chang Chueh (a follower of Huang-Lao Chun), who pursued conversion through the use of missionaries.
20,000 Waldenses in the Piedmont in 1850 when Mormon missionaries learned about them.
www.adherents.com /Na/Na_662.html   (2763 words)

  
 Adherents.com
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought (Summer 1998); pg.
At times influential in Egypt, Sudan and Turkey, the Dervish Orders have never enjoyed much influence in the Arab countries of the Fertile Crescent.
The next year a group of Dejiao members crossed to Hong Kong from Chaozhou and founded the first branch, the Zi Yuan Ge.
www.adherents.com /Na/Na_255.html   (2763 words)

  
 BYU - English Department - Faculty Recent Work
Gideon Burton and Neal Kramer, "The State of Mormon Literature and Criticism." Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 32.3 (Fall 1999): 1-12.
Gideon Burton, "Toward a Mormon Criticism: Should We Ask: 'Is This Mormon Literature'?" Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 32.3 (Fall 1999): 33-43.
Gideon Burton and Neal Kramer, editors, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 32.3 (Fall 1999).
english.byu.edu /asp/webpages/recentwork.asp?netid=gob2   (2763 words)

  
 Walker, Whittaker, and Allen/Mormon History. Chapter 5
See Leonard J. Arrington, "The Intellectual Tradition of the Latter-day Saints," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 4 (Spring 1969): 13-26; and Richard J. Cummings, "Quintessential Mormonism: Literal-Mindedness as a Way of Life," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 15 (Winter 1982): 92-102.
Other critical discussions of psychohistory in Mormon studies are Hill, "Historiography of Mormonism," 418-26; and T. Brink, "Joseph Smith: The Verdict of Depth Psychology," Journal of Mormon History 3 (1976): 73-83.
Ely could see the changes starting even then, but his article was to be a harbinger of the kind of social science literature on the Mormons that was to predominate for decades: historical and contemporary studies of social geography, rural sociology, and agricultural economics.
www.press.uillinois.edu /epub/books/walker/05.html   (12741 words)

  
 Meridian Magazine : :Understanding the “Stages of Grief” of Former Members Who Attack the Church
He has also published articles in scholarly journals including: Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Genealogical Journal, The Journal of the John Whitmer Historical Association, Journal of Mormon History, Mormon Historical Studies, and Utah Historical Quarterly.
He is the author of Penny Tracts and Polemics: A Critical Analysis of Anti-Mormon Pamphleteering in Great Britain, 1837-1860 (Salt Lake City, Utah: Greg Kofford Books, 2002).
[ii].A discussion of this model of people leaving the Church can be found in my book, Penny Tracts and Polemics: A Critical Analysis of Anti-Mormon Pamphleteering in Great Britain, 1837-1860 (Salt Lake City: Greg Kofford Books, 2002).
www.meridianmagazine.com /articles/030627grief.html   (12741 words)

  
 Meridian Magazine : :Understanding the “Stages of Grief” of Former Members Who Attack the Church
He has also published articles in scholarly journals including: Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Genealogical Journal, The Journal of the John Whitmer Historical Association, Journal of Mormon History, Mormon Historical Studies, and Utah Historical Quarterly.
He is the author of Penny Tracts and Polemics: A Critical Analysis of Anti-Mormon Pamphleteering in Great Britain, 1837-1860 (Salt Lake City, Utah: Greg Kofford Books, 2002).
He has also written encyclopedic entries for the Encyclopedia of the American West and Encyclopedia of Latter-day Saint History.
www.meridianmagazine.com /articles/030627grief.html   (12741 words)

  
 Walker, Whittaker, and Allen/Mormon History. Chapter 5
Leonard J. Arrington, "The Founding of the LDS Institutes of Religion," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 2 (Summer 1967): 137-47; Russell Swensen, "Mormons and the University of Chicago Divinity School," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 7 (Summer 1972): 37-47.
The Research Information Division has also conducted studies on how the LDS religion is faring in various parts of the world, but, again, these studies are not open to the public.
Considering how important and formative the missionary enterprise is in the LDS Church, it has generated relatively little scholarly literature, at least in published form.
www.press.uillinois.edu /epub/books/walker/05.html   (12741 words)

  
 FAIR Topical Guide: First Vision
James B. Allen, "The Signifcance of Joseph Smith's "First Vision" in Mormon Thought," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon of Mormon Thought (Autumn 1966), 29-45 Historian James B. Allen looks as the development of the First Vision as a personal experience to a major event in LDS history.
Richard L. Bushman, "The First Vision Story Revived," Dialogue (Spring 1969), 82-93 Professor Bushman examines some of the arguments which attempt to cast doubt on Joseph Smith's "first vision."
Milton V. Backman Jr., "Joseph Smith's Recitals of the First Vision," Ensign, January 1985, 8.
www.fairlds.org /apol/ai063.html   (1137 words)

  
 The Autobiography of B. H. Roberts
Gary James Bergera is associate publisher of Signature Books, managing editor of Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, co-author of Brigham Young University: A House of Faith (which granted him a B.A. and M.P.A.), and editor of Line Upon Line: Essays on Mormon Doctrine and The Autobiography of B. Roberts.
He is a contributing author to The Prophet Puzzle: Interpretive Essays on Joseph Smith, Religion, Feminism, and Freedom of Conscience: A Mormon/Humanist Dialogue, and The Search for Harmony: Essays on Science and Mormonism.
In this exciting and readable autobiography, one of the most colorful figures of the American frontier recounts his poverty-stricken childhood, his rowdy adolescence in Rocky Mountain mining camps, his unsuccessful bid for the U.S. Congress, and his stormy career in one of the leading councils of the Mormon church.
www.signaturebooks.com /autobiog.htm   (1137 words)

  
 cv.htm
Kendall White, Jr., "A Reply to Critics of the Mormon Neo-Orthodoxy Hypothesis," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, 6 (Spring, 1971): 97-100.
Kendall White, Jr., "A Feminist Challenge: 'Mormons for ERA' as an Internal Social Movement," The Journal of Ethnic Studies, 13, 1 (Spring, 1985): 29-50.
Kendall White, Jr., "Mormonism in America and Canada: Accommodation to the Nation-State," The Canadian Journal of Sociology, 3 (Spring, 1978): 161-181.
culture.wlu.edu /faculty/whitek/cv.htm   (1137 words)

  
 mhaaw1.html
GRACE FORT ARRINGTON AWARD FOR HISTORICAL EXCELLENCE: Jan Shipps, professor of history and religion at Indiana University, Indianapolis, for her book Mormonism: The Story of a New Religious Tradition (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1985), and for important contributions to Journal of Mormon History, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Sunstone, and other periodicals.
SPECIAL CITATIONS: to the two First Presidencies of the RLDS and LDS Churches for approving a microfilm document exchange; and to Juanita Brooks for her life of dedication, scholarship, and the courage in which she has led the way in an honest and professional approach to the study of the Mormon past.
BEST BOOK AWARD: Leonard J. Arrington, Feramorz Y. Fox (deceased), and Dean L. May, Building the City of God: Community and Cooperation among the Mormons (Salt Lake City, Deseret Book, 1976).
www.geocities.com /Athens/Oracle/7207/mhaaw1.html   (3228 words)

  
 In Sacred Loneliness: The Plural Wives of Joseph Smith - Todd Compton - book review
Todd Compton, Ph.D., classics, UCLA, is the editor of Hugh Nibley's Mormonism and Early Christianity, a contributor to The Encyclopedia of Mormonism and Women and Authority: Re-emerging Mormon Feminism, and has been published in the American Journal of Philology, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Classical Quarterly, and the Journal of Popular Culture, among others.
He currently plays electric violin in the Mark Davis Group, which performs at coffee houses and music clubs in the Los Angeles area, and is the assistant systems manager for Paul, Hastings, Jaofski, and Walker.
But all considered their lives unhappy, except for the joy they found in their children and grandchildren.
www.lds-mormon.com /isl.shtml   (367 words)

  
 Changing World Chapter 17
The Council of Fifty thought there might be a chance and nominated the Mormon prophet for the Presidency of the United States" (Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Autumn 1966, p.67).
Antagonism toward the Mormon Prophet was further incited when it was correctly rumored, that he had been ordained 'King over the Immediate House of Israel' by the Council of Fifty...
Smith and the Council of Fifty seems to have taken the election quite seriously, much more so, indeed, than both Mormons and anti-Mormons have heretofore suspected" (Quest for Empire, p.74).
www.utlm.org /onlinebooks/changech17.htm   (5830 words)

  
 Walker, Whittaker, and Allen/Mormon History. Appendix B
Native American bibliography is the subject of David J. Whittaker's "Mormons and Native Americans: A Historical and Bibliographical Introduction," Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 18 (Winter 1985): 33-64.
Mormon proselytizing is the subject of David J. Whittaker's bibliographic essay, "Mormon Missiology: An Introduction and Guide to the Sources," in The Disciple as Witness: Essays on Latter-day Saint History and Doctrine in Honor of Richard Lloyd Anderson, ed.
Managed as an open research facility (with the exception of BYU's own institutional archives), this institution has a broader focus than the LDS Historical Department; it holds and collects material that places Mormonism in its wider cultural matrix, especially the American West.
www.press.uillinois.edu /epub/books/walker/appendix_b.html   (8706 words)

  
 Sidney Rigdon: A Portrait of Religious Excess
He has been published in Brigham Young University Studies, Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Sunstone, Utah Historical Quarterly, and Utah Holiday, and has won awards from the Dialogue Foundation, John Whitmer Historical Association, and the Mormon History Association.
He is the author of Lehi: Portraits of a Utah Town, Mormon Polygamy: A History, and Sidney Rigdon: A Portrait of Religious Excess ; and the co-author of A Book of Mormons.
When he lost prominence, his early attainments were virtually written out of the historical record.
www.signaturebooks.com /sidney.htm   (8706 words)

  
 OccultForums.com - Joseph Smith and Kabbalah: The Occult Connection
This work was originally published in Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought, Vol.
There is an ongoing demand for this paper but unfortunately Dialogue sold out its entire printing of the Fall, 1994 issue within a few weeks.
The paper received considerable notice, and in 1995 the Mormon History Association recognized Joseph Smith and Kabbalah: The Occult Connection with its annual award for the best article in Mormon studies.
www.occultforums.com /showthread.php?t=11483   (8706 words)

  
 Walker, Whittaker, and Allen/Mormon History. Appendix B
Lyman Tyler produced a short note, "The Availability of Information Concerning the Mormons," in the inaugural issue of Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought 1 (Autumn 1966): 172-75.
Eventually Tyler brought the project to BYU in the hope of providing a tool for developing the university's Mormon holdings.
It was there that BYU specialist Chad J. Flake became the project's key bibliographer, and the resulting work was published under his name: Chad J. Flake, comp., A Mormon Bibliography, 1830-1930: Books, Pamphlets, Periodicals, and Broadsides relating to the First Century of Mormonism (Salt Lake City: University of Utah Press, 1978).
www.press.uillinois.edu /epub/books/walker/appendix_b.html   (8706 words)

  
 Walker, Whittaker, and Allen/Mormon History. Appendix B
Gary Gillum compiled and Daniel Maryon edited Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought: Index to Volumes 1-20, 1966-1987, published in 1989; Gary Gillum and the Sunstone staff prepared the Sunstone and Sunstone Review Index (1975-1980) in 1981.
Most of these are also listed in James B. Allen, Ronald W. Walker, and David J. Whittaker's Studies in Mormon History, 1830-1997: An Indexed Bibliography (Urbana: University of Illinois Press, in cooperation with the Smith Institute for LDS History, Brigham Young University, 2000).
For those interested in this literature, one place to begin is William P. Connors, "Mormon Opposition Literature: A Historiographical Critique and Case Study, 1844-57" (Master's thesis, Brigham Young University, 1994), which includes a listing of early anti-Mormon works.
www.press.uillinois.edu /epub/books/walker/appendix_b.html   (8706 words)

  
 Artilcle Title
Lavina Fielding Anderson, “The LDS Intellectual Community and Church Leadership: A Contemporary Chronology,” Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought
As we approach the tenth anniversary of the Church’s disciplining of six Mormon intellectuals and heightened tension between official and unofficial Mormonism, two careful Church watchers, scholars, and friends reflect—and disagree—about “ecclesiastical abuse,” accountability, and how best to move toward understanding and forgiveness.
Lavina Fielding Anderson and Janice Merrill Allred (Salt Lake City: Mormon Alliance); “Church Funds Initiative to Ban Same-Sex Marriages in Alaska,” Salt Lake Tribune, 5 Oct. 1998, A4; “A Mormon Crusade in Hawaii: Church Aims to End Gay Union,” Salt Lake Tribune, 9 June 1996, B1.
www.sunstoneonline.com /magazine/issues/128/features/church-scholars.html   (8706 words)

  
 David O. McKay and the Rise of Modern Mormonism
He is president and CEO of Virion Systems, Inc. and he is a board member of Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought and The Journal of Mormon History.
Based on a wide array of sources heretofore unavailable to scholars, it is a remarkable combination of biographical narrative and historical analysis that is destined to function as a scaffolding on which to hang the still virtually untold story of the Latter-day Saints in the middle of the twentieth century.
Ordained as an apostle in 1906, David O. McKay served as president of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints from 1951 until his death in 1970.
www.uofupress.com /store/product259.html   (463 words)

  
 Changing World Chapter 11 Part 1
Dialogue: A Journal of Mormon Thought gave this information concerning him: "Klaus Baer is Associate Professor of Egyptology at the University of Chicago's Oriental Institute, and was one of Professor Hugh Nibley's primary tutors in the art of reading Egyptian characters" ( Dialogue, Autumn 1968, p.109).
Finally, after the rediscovery of the papyri in the Metropolitan Museum was announced, the church leaders admitted that they had this fragment of papyrus.
In the Salt Lake City Messenger for March, 1968, we stated that Grant Heward felt that the fragment of papyrus Joseph Smith used as the basis for his "Book of Abraham" was in reality a part of the Egyptian "Book of Breathings." This identification has been confirmed by several prominent Egyptologists.
www.utlm.org /onlinebooks/changech11a.htm   (463 words)

  
 MHA To Meet in Tucson in 2002
While a member of an LDS bishopric at Stanford in 1966, he started, with G. Wesley Johnson, an LDS intellectual journal, called Dialogue: Journal of Mormon Thought, which continues to publish today.
His two most influential mentors were Lowell L. Bennion, a great Mormon humanist, teacher and writer, and Marion Duff Hanks, LDS general authority emeritus, both of whom taught him at the U.'s LDS Institute, and both of whom set a lifetime example of service.
Numano suggested that LDS Church now seems to turn to the last type as revealed in some reports issued by the Church.
mywebpages.comcast.net /rromig1/oct01nl.htm   (463 words)

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