Claremont Mormon Studies

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Claremont j n e w s l e t t e r i fall 2009 t Issue n o. 1 Impressions of Claremont b y Richard L. Bushman Howard W. Hunter Chair of, Claremont Graduate University Claudia and I came to Claremont primarily for adventure, and we have not been disappointed. For all the heavy lifting in researching and writing, preparing classes, and criticizing students wor, there is a strong element of play. It is fun to tal about imponderable questions lie the nature of religion. It is entertaining to wor through the religious deliberations of people long since dead. What is more exhilarating than a seminar discussion that taes off? We lie the feel of the buildings and the campus. The dappling of sunshine and shade playing on the walls gives everything a cool, inviting demeanor. Our office is light and airy, the way we would lie our teaching to be. We lie the students, everyone with a story and a sharply etched personality. All are striving Page 1 for something just out of reach but desirable. Our only regret is that our adventure costs the students so much. It taes a miracle everyday to pay the huge cost of tuition and support not just one life, but in many cases two or more. There is something positively medieval about the asceticism attached to the study of religion at Claremont. I hope that the combination of learning and hardship will form us into a band of brothers and sisters. Learning in the Latter-day Saint tradition is meant to be fraternal. We pledge ourselves to each other as well as to our studies. We teach one another out of the best boos. Claudia and I feel privileged to be part of this grand enterprise, and our association with this collection of striving scholars is the part we lie most of all. t iin this issue The Year Ahead page 2 Women s Oral History page 3 Past Events page 4 Karen Torjesen on at Claremont page 4 In the Lifeboat with a Tiger page 6 CGU Mormon Studies on itunes U Claremont Graduate University and the School of Religion have added lectures and other presentations to itunes U. Some of our Mormon Studies events are now available in this collection. Visit http://bit.ly/cgu-on-itunes to subscribe and download audio tracs.

The Year Ahead The response to last year s lecture and conference series has encouraged the program to line up another group of eminent speaers. No single theme has dictated the selection; the governing principle has been to get the best we could find. R. Bushman September 24 Daniel Waler Howe "Joseph Smith's America" Daniel Howe is author of the Pulitzer Prize winning history, What Hath God Wrought: The Transformation of America, 1815-1848, and Professor of History Emeritus at UCLA. He was Rhodes Professor of American History at Oxford University from 1992 to 2002. Howe was born in Ogden, Utah, and nows Mormons well. October 22 Father Alexei Smith and Robert L. Millet Catholic Dialogue on Priesthood and Sacraments Father Alexei Smith, the priest in charge of interfaith dialogue for the Los Angeles diocese will represent Catholicism, and representatives of the LDS community will spea for Mormonism. There will be an informal afternoon conversation and a formal lecture and response in the evening. November 12 Harry S. Stout "Joseph Smith and Jonathan Edwards" Harry S. Stout is Professor of History, Religious Studies, and American Studies at Yale University and Jonathan Edwards Professor of American Christianity, Yale Divinity School. He is general editor of the Jonathan Edwards Papers and a member of the National Advisory Board for the Joseph Smith Papers. He is uniquely qualified to compare these two giants of American religious history. February 18 Grant Hardy "Reading the Boo of Mormon" Grant Hardy, Associate Professor of History at the University of North Carolina Asheville, is best nown to Mormons for The Boo of Mormon: A Reader s Edition, but he soon will be better nown for his structural analysis of the Boo of Mormon coming out with Oxford University Press next year. Hardy explains how the three major historians in the boo, Nephi, Mormon, and Moroni constructed their narratives differently, maing each of these writers a distinctive presence in the boo. March 18 Daniel C. Peterson "The State of the Debate over the Boo of Mormon" Daniel Peterson, Professor of Islamic Studies and Arabic at Brigham Young University, is best nown in the academic world as an expert on Islam. As editor of the FARMS Review of Boos for many years, however, he is well informed on the controversies surrounding the historicity of the Boo of Mormon. In his tal, he will report on the debate as it stands right now. (continued on page 3) Page 2

(continued from page 2) April 15 Martha Bradley Evans The Fundamentalists Today Martha Evans, Professor of Architecture at the University of Utah, also directs the Honors Program. She has written on the Utah controversy over the ERA and a joint biography of four Mormon women entitled Four Zinas : A Story of Mothers and Daughters on the Mormon Frontier. She gained insight into Fundamentalist polygamous communities doing research for her boo Kidnapped from that Land: The Government Raids on the Short Cree Polygamists. May 21 22 Association of Mormon Scholars in the Humanities The Family and Human Relationships in History, Literature, Art, and Philosophy Conference The Association is now soliciting papers for the conference. Every story, it is said, is a family story. Yet in stressing the freedom and self-sufficiency of the individual, modern culture de-emphasizes the degree to which people are born in dependency, of specific parents, and develop in and through relationships with others, most closely in the family. By considering the family, family history, and human relationships, this conference will invite inquiry into changes in the culture of the family over time, inquiries into family memory, depictions of the family and the individual in art and literature, and philosophical investigations of the role of family, friends, and mentors in personal development. Women s Oral History The Howard W. Hunter Program for Mormon Studies announces an ongoing oral history project to begin this fall. Women in three areas, Claremont, Pasadena, and Newport Beach will begin interviews to flesh out the lived history of LDS women in the 20th century primarily in Southern California, to document and categorize experiences otherwise unrecorded. Wor will begin in those three areas to locate candidates for interviews, to transcribe, edit, and index the interviews, and to wor toward a conceptualization of Mormon women s experience. The project will be undertaen in connection with the class Mormon Women in the Twentieth Century REL 313 to be offered in the school of religion this fall. Nominations for people to be interviewed and offers to become involved in the program, from students or from the community, will be welcomed. Write Dr. Claudia Bushman at the School of Religion, 831 N. Dartmouth Avenue, Claremont, California, or at claudia.bushman@ beniana.com. t Q&A with visiting scholars Under the sponsorship of CMSSA, each lecturer in this year s series meets with graduate students for informal discussions about current issues in the field and useful strategies in pursuing a career in scholarship. CMSSA members and other graduate students are invited to attend these discussions which are usually held a couple of hours before the evening lecture. For more information on these student events, visit the student association s website at http://rsc.cgu.edu/cmssa or sign up with the CMSSA mailing list by emailing mormonstudies@gmail.com. The lectures are given on Thursdays at 8 p.m. in the Mudd Auditorium, Claremont School of Theology, and are free and open to the public. t Page 3

On at Claremont b y Karen Torjesen Former Dean of the School of Religion, Claremont Graduate University at Claremont is a significant contributor to religious pluralism at Claremont. For years we have outstanding Mormon students in Philosophy of Religion, Theology, History of Christianity, Biblical Studies, and more recently Women s Studies in Religion. They mastered their fields of study, contributed interesting research, and went on to teaching positions across the country, but their presence had little impact on the study of religion, nor did their perspective as Mormons generate new questions, nor did their classmates learn much from them about the fascinating history and complex of practices of Mormonism. Now that has changed. It reminds me of the process of Past Events developing women s studies at Claremont. For many years women students were woring on the side to learn what they could about women s issues. Their perspectives required a new way of looing at things, different questions, even different epistemologies, but there was no space for these in the way the study of religion was constituted. When women s studies courses and programs were introduced an inevitable transformation began to tae place. When women scholars of religion were The School of Religion at CGU has sponsored events in since 2000. The following outline lists conferences, lectures, and courses which have comprised the program at CGU since its inception. at Claremont will help us rethin the categories of what constitutes a religion. invited to have a voice, to raise their own questions, the study of religion began to change. New content lead to new methodologies, new methodologies lead to new epistemologies. at Claremont will do something similar for the study of Christianity and will help us rethin the categories of what constitutes a religion. Religious pluralism will mean that we (all of us) will all be impacted, our field of vision will become larger and our understanding of religion more complex. t Richard Bushman Courses Armand Mauss Mormons in the History of the American West Spr 2005 The Mormon Theological Tradition Fall 2008 The Mormon Experience: Sociological Perspectives (with Armand Mauss) SPR 2009 Claudia Bushman Mormonism Through the Eyes of Women Fall 2008 Women s Religious Autobiographies Spr 2009 Mormons in Sociological Perspective Spr 2006 Mormons in the History of the American West Spr 2007 The Mormon Experience: Sociological Perspectives (with Richard Bushman) Spr 2009 Brian Birch Mormonism and Christian Theology Spr 2008 (continued on page 5) Page 4

(continued from page 4) Conferences Positioning Mormonism in Religious Studies and American History October 2004 Featured professors Philip Barlow, Kathryn Daynes, Kathleen Flae, Terryl Givens, and Grant Underwood. Joseph Smith and the Prophetic Tradition: A Comparative Inquiry October 2005 Featured professors Richard Bushman, Robert Millet, and Robert Rees. May These Principles Be Established : Mormonism in the Political Arena March 2008 Biennial conference of the Claremont Student Association. Mormonism through the Eyes of Women: Envisioning New Spaces for Theology and Practice March 2009 Conference sponsored by the Claremont Student Association which featured speaers Laurel Thatcher Ulrich, Claudia Bushman, Margaret Toscano, and other graduate students. Visit http:// ccdl.libraries.claremont.edu/collection.php?alias=/cms for full conference video and papers. Parallels and Convergences: Mormon Thought and Engineering Vision March 2009 Co-sponsored with the Mormon Scholars Foundation and JPL. Terryl Givens gave the eynote lecture. Upon All Nations: Religious Pluralism May 2009 Society for Mormon Philosophy and Theology conference. Lectures Richard Bushman Was Joseph Smith an American Prophet? Feb 2003 Jan Shipps Are Mormons Christian? Oct 2003 Armand Mauss The Most Segregated Hour: Race and Religion in the American West Feb 2004 Daniel Peterson & Hamid Mavani A Mormon Muslim Conversation Oct 2007 Truman Madsen Philosophy and Mormonism Feb 2008 Richard E. Turley, Jr. LDS Response to the Mountain Meadows Tragedy Mar 2008 Mar Paredes Mirrors and Windows: Facing Religious Stereotypes and Prejudice Apr 2008 Ronald Waler Brigham Young: New Approaches Sep 2008 Richard Mouw & Robert Millet Evangelical Views of Joseph Smith Oct 2008 Marlin K. Jensen The Role of the Church Historian Nov 2008 D. Michael Quinn The Ambiguous History of Us Versus Them in Early Mormon Experience Nov 2008 David Hall Through a Different Glass: Reconsidering the Puritans and their Legacies in American Religious History With Reflections on Mormonism Feb 2009 Karen Torjesen (Brown Bag Lecture) Mormonism and Early Christianity Feb 2009 Laurel Thatcher Ulrich Reading Nineteenth-century Mormon Diaries Mar 2009 Anselm Min (Brown Bag Lecture) Are Wors for the Dead Efficacious? Mar 2009 Grant Underwood The Genesis of Mormon Scripture: Revising Joseph Smith s Revelations Apr 2009 Page 5

In the Lifeboat with a Tiger b y David Golding President of the Claremont Student Association Professor Bushman once ased how I was holding up in the sometimes tumultuous world of graduate studies in religion. Lie many of my fellow classmates, I have encountered in religious studies historical facts, theories, interpretations, and criticisms that seem unsettling and abrasive, especially at first. How one resolves or reacts to the tensions that such academic inquiries produce can have significant consequences on one s life. I had just finished Yann Martel s Life of Pi (Orlando: Harcourt, 2001), which tells the story of a young man from India who embraces three religions: Hinduism, Christianity, and Islam. This young man finds himself, at one point, lost somewhere in the middle of the Pacific Ocean and trapped in a lifeboat with a 450-pound Bengal tiger for a companion. This character must struggle to survive by not only fighting through his mental and spiritual tensions, but against the ferocious appetite of this daunting animal. I told Professor Bushman that I felt at times lie Pi, except that empirical observations that challenge my prior thining intimidate me rather than a tiger. But, lie Pi, in many ways this tiger eeps me alive and provides meaning in its own way. Unlie Pi, I Unlie Pi, I have never felt lie I wrestle with the tiger alone. have never felt lie I wrestle with the tiger alone. Even before I committed to study at CGU, Richard Livingston introduced me to the Claremont Student Association. Since then, I have had the opportunity to engage in rigorous debate with fellow Latter-day Saints of wildly different opinions and persuasions. CMSSA provides a forum for not only Latterday Saint graduate students but for anyone interested in Mormon studies, and my interactions with non-lds students have also enhanced my appreciation for communities beyond my own. I have no doubt that without this forum for personal and professional dialogue, I would have more acutely felt that I face the study of religion by myself. I m grateful that students before me had the foresight to care for each other in personal and professional ways. Often, I m most challenged intellectually by my peers in CMSSA. Not only do I feel prepared to confront the challenges this course of study brings by my membership in CMSSA, but I notice my professional abilities as a scholarin-training improve. I encourage my fellow students to get involved and to tae advantage of our ongoing conversation on Mormonism and religious studies. t Claremont Mormon Studies Newsletter A joint publication of the Howar d W. Hunter Chair of Latter-day Saint Council on Clar emont Mor mon Studies Student Association Howard W. Hunter Chair of Richard Bushman LDS Council on President Joseph Bentley Claremont Student Association President David Golding Vice-President Jacob Baer Howar d W. Hunter Chair of 831 N. Dartmouth Ave. Claremont, CA 91711 Page 6