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A Peculiar People Antimormonism And The Making Of Religion In Nineteenthcentury America 1st J Spencer Fluhman

  • SKU: BELL-5768470
A Peculiar People Antimormonism And The Making Of Religion In Nineteenthcentury America 1st J Spencer Fluhman
$ 31.00 $ 45.00 (-31%)

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A Peculiar People Antimormonism And The Making Of Religion In Nineteenthcentury America 1st J Spencer Fluhman instant download after payment.

Publisher: The University of North Carolina Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 3.12 MB
Pages: 240
Author: J. Spencer Fluhman
ISBN: 9780807835715, 0807835714
Language: English
Year: 2012
Edition: 1st

Product desciption

A Peculiar People Antimormonism And The Making Of Religion In Nineteenthcentury America 1st J Spencer Fluhman by J. Spencer Fluhman 9780807835715, 0807835714 instant download after payment.

Though the U.S. Constitution guarantees the free exercise of religion, it does not specify what counts as a religion. From its founding in the 1830s, Mormonism, a homegrown American faith, drew thousands of converts but far more critics. In "A Peculiar People", J. Spencer Fluhman offers a comprehensive history of anti-Mormon thought and the associated passionate debates about religious authenticity in nineteenth-century America. He argues that understanding anti-Mormonism provides critical insight into the American psyche because Mormonism became a potent symbol around which ideas about religion and the state took shape.
Fluhman documents how Mormonism was defamed, with attacks often aimed at polygamy, and shows how the new faith supplied a social enemy for a public agitated by the popular press and wracked with social and economic instability. Taking the story to the turn of the century, Fluhman demonstrates how Mormonism's own transformations, the result of both choice and outside force, sapped the strength of the worst anti-Mormon vitriol, triggering the acceptance of Utah into the Union in 1896 and also paving the way for the dramatic, yet still grudging, acceptance of Mormonism as an American religion.

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