Abridging the Records of the Zoramite Mission: Mormon as Historian
Abstract: Since the mid-twentieth century, scholarly studies of the literary craftsmanship of biblical texts have revealed considerable insights into the intended purposes of the authors of these scriptural narratives. The present study applies the analytical methods of these studies to Mormon's abridgment of Alma's records of the Zoramite mission (Alma 31–35), revealing intricate patterns of literary conventions ranging from the most specific (e.g., diction, syntax, and figures of speech) to the most general (e.g., rhetoric, tone, and structural logic). From this perspective, Alma 31 provides a framework to distinguish Nephite and Zoramite religious practices and structure the narrative of the entire Zoramite mission, including the missionaries' teachings. More broadly, Mormon's account of the Zoramite mission sets the stage for the general degradation of Nephite society that focuses his abridgment of Nephi's Large Plates for the next one hundred years.
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Abridging the Records of the Zoramite Mission: Mormon as Historian
Abstract: Since the mid-twentieth century, scholarly studies of the literary craftsmanship of biblical texts have revealed considerable insights into the intended purposes of the authors of these scriptural narratives. The present study applies the analytical methods of these studies to Mormon's abridgment of Alma's records of the Zoramite mission (Alma 31–35), revealing intricate patterns of literary conventions ranging from the most specific (e.g., diction, syntax, and figures of speech) to the most general (e.g., rhetoric, tone, and structural logic). From this perspective, Alma 31 provides a framework to distinguish Nephite and Zoramite religious practices and structure the narrative of the entire Zoramite mission, including the missionaries' teachings. More broadly, Mormon's account of the Zoramite mission sets the stage for the general degradation of Nephite society that focuses his abridgment of Nephi's Large Plates for the next one hundred years.
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Abridging the Records of the Zoramite Mission: Mormon as Historian

Abridging the Records of the Zoramite Mission: Mormon as Historian

by Steven L. Olsen
Abridging the Records of the Zoramite Mission: Mormon as Historian

Abridging the Records of the Zoramite Mission: Mormon as Historian

by Steven L. Olsen

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Overview

Abstract: Since the mid-twentieth century, scholarly studies of the literary craftsmanship of biblical texts have revealed considerable insights into the intended purposes of the authors of these scriptural narratives. The present study applies the analytical methods of these studies to Mormon's abridgment of Alma's records of the Zoramite mission (Alma 31–35), revealing intricate patterns of literary conventions ranging from the most specific (e.g., diction, syntax, and figures of speech) to the most general (e.g., rhetoric, tone, and structural logic). From this perspective, Alma 31 provides a framework to distinguish Nephite and Zoramite religious practices and structure the narrative of the entire Zoramite mission, including the missionaries' teachings. More broadly, Mormon's account of the Zoramite mission sets the stage for the general degradation of Nephite society that focuses his abridgment of Nephi's Large Plates for the next one hundred years.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940185744543
Publisher: Interpreter Foundation
Publication date: 07/20/2022
Series: Interpreter: A Journal of Latter-day Saint Faith and Scholarship , #52
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 337 KB

About the Author

Steven L. Olsen (BA, Brigham Young University, 1975; AM, Ph.D., University of Chicago, 1978, 1985) is Master Curator of the Church History Department, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, where he has worked his entire career (four plus decades) creating museum exhibits, restoring historic sites, and leading organizational change. He has also been president or board member of a variety of state, regional, and national professional service organizations. He publishes widely in the fields of Latter-day Saint studies and museums studies and frequently presents at scholarly and professional conferences.
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