Producing Ancient Scripture: Joseph Smith's Translation Projects in the Development of Mormon Christianity

Producing Ancient Scripture: Joseph Smith's Translation Projects in the Development of Mormon Christianity

Producing Ancient Scripture: Joseph Smith's Translation Projects in the Development of Mormon Christianity

Producing Ancient Scripture: Joseph Smith's Translation Projects in the Development of Mormon Christianity

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Overview

Joseph Smith, the founding prophet of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints and of the broader Latter-day Saint movement, produced several volumes of scripture between 1829, when he translated the Book of Mormon, and 1844, when he was murdered. The Book of Mormon, published in 1830, is well known. Less read and studied are the subsequent texts that Smith translated after the Book of Mormon, texts that he presented as the writings of ancient Old World and New World prophets. These works were published and received by early Latter-day Saints as prophetic scripture that included important revelations and commandments from God.
 
This collaborative volume is the first to study Joseph Smith’s translation projects in their entirety. In this carefully curated collection, experts contribute cutting-edge research and incisive analysis. The chapters explore Smith’s translation projects in focused detail and in broad contexts, as well as in comparison and conversation with one another. Authors approach Smith’s sacred texts historically, textually, linguistically, and literarily to offer a multidisciplinary view. Scrupulous examination of the production and content of Smith’s translations opens new avenues for understanding the foundations of Mormonism, provides insight on aspects of early American religious culture, and helps conceptualize the production and transmission of sacred texts.
 

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781607817390
Publisher: University of Utah Press
Publication date: 04/24/2020
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 440
File size: 6 MB

About the Author

Michael Hubbard MacKay is associate professor in the Department of Church History and Doctrine at Brigham Young University and a former historian and coeditor at the Joseph Smith Papers project.
 
Mark Ashurst-McGee is a senior historian in the Church History Department and the senior research and review editor for the Joseph Smith Papers project, where he serves as a specialist in document analysis and documentary editing methodology.
 
Brian M. Hauglid is associate professor and visiting fellow at the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship.
 

Table of Contents

Figures
Tables
Mormon Canon of Scripture
Short Citations to the Joseph Smith Papers
1. Introduction - Michael Hubbard MacKay, Mark Ashurst-McGee, and Brian M. Hauglid
Part I: Context and Commencement
2. “By the Gift and Power of God”: Translation among the Gifts of the Spirit
Christopher James Blythe
3. “Bringing Forth” the Book of Mormon: Translation as the Reconfiguration of Bodies in Space-Time
Jared Hickman
4. Performing the Translation: Character Transcripts and Joseph Smith’s Earliest Translating Practices
Michael Hubbard MacKay
5. Reconfiguring the Archive: Women and the Social Production of the Book of Mormon
Amy Easton-Flake and Rachel Cope
Part II: Translating The Book of Mormon
6. Seeing the Voice of God: The Book of Mormon on Its Own Translation
Samuel Morris Brown
7. Joseph Smith, Helen Schucman, and the Experience of Producing a Spiritual Text: Comparing the Translating of the Book of Mormon and the Scribing of A Course in Miracles              
Ann Taves
8. Nephi’s Project: The Gold Plates as Book History
Richard Lyman Bushman
9. Ancient History and Modern Commandments: The Book of Mormon in Comparison with Joseph Smith’s Other Revelations
Grant Hardy
Part III: Translating the King James Bible
10. The Tarrying of the Beloved Disciple: The Textual Formation of the Account of John
David W. Grua and William V. Smith
11. A Recovered Resource: The Use of Adam Clarke’s Bible Commentary in Joseph Smith’s Bible Translation
Thomas A. Wayment and Haley Wilson-Lemmon
12. Lost Scripture and “the Interpolations of Men”: Joseph Smith’s Revelation on the Apocrypha
Gerrit Dirkmaat
13. Translation, Revelation, and the Hermeneutics of Theological Innovation: Joseph Smith and the Record of John
Nicholas J. Frederick
Part IV: Pure Language, the Book of Abraham, and the Kinderhook Plates
14. “Eternal Wisdom Engraven upon the Heavens”: Joseph Smith’s Pure Language Project
David Golding
15. “Translating an Alphabet to the Book of Abraham”: Joseph Smith’s Study of the Egyptian Language and His Translation of the Book of Abraham
Brian M. Hauglid
16. Approaching Egyptian Papyri through Biblical Language: Joseph Smith’s Use of Hebrew in His Translation of the Book of Abraham
Matthew J. Grey
17. “President Joseph Has Translated a Portion”: Joseph Smith and the Mistranslation of the Kinderhook Plates
Don Bradley and Mark Ashurst-McGee
Contributors
Index
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