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The Bible, Mormon Scripture, and the Rhetoric of Allusivity (Hardcover)
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The Bible, Mormon Scripture, and the Rhetoric of Allusivity (Hardcover)
Series: Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Mormon Studies Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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One of the most pertinent questions facing students of Mormon
Studies is gaining further understanding of the function the Bible
played in the composition of Joseph Smith's primary compositions,
the Book of Mormon and the Doctrine and Covenants. With a few
notable exceptions, such as Philip Barlow's Mormons and the Bible
and Grant Hardy's Understanding the Book of Mormon, full-length
monographs devoted to this topic have been lacking. This manuscript
attempts to remedy this through a close analysis of how Mormon
scripture, specifically the Book of Mormon and the Doctrine and
Covenants, integrates the writings of New Testament into its own
text. This manuscript takes up the argument that through the
rhetoric of allusivity (the allusion to one text by another) Joseph
Smith was able to bestow upon his works an authority they would
have lacked without the incorporation of biblical language. In
order to provide a thorough analysis focused on how Smith
incorporated the biblical text into his own texts, this work will
limit itself only to those passages in Mormon scripture that allude
to the Prologue of John's gospel (John 1:1-18). The choice of the
Prologue of John is due to its frequent appearance throughout
Smith's corpus as well as its recognizable language. This study
further argues that the manner in which Smith incorporates the
Johannine Prologue is by no means uniform but actually quite
creative, taking (at least) four different forms: Echo, Allusion,
Expansion, and Inversion. The methodology used in this work is
based primarily upon recent developments in intertextual studies of
the Bible, an analytical method that has proved to be quite
effective in studying later author's use of earlier texts.
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