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Joseph Smith's Translation - The Words and Worlds of Early Mormonism (Hardcover)
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Joseph Smith's Translation - The Words and Worlds of Early Mormonism (Hardcover)
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Mormonism's founder, Joseph Smith, claimed to have translated
ancient scriptures. He dictated an American Bible from metal plates
reportedly buried by ancient Jews in a nearby hill, and produced an
Egyptian "Book of Abraham" derived from funerary papyri he
extracted from a collection of mummies he bought from a traveling
showman. In addition, he rewrote sections of the King James Version
as a "New Translation" of the Bible. Smith and his followers used
the term translation to describe the genesis of these English
scriptures, which remain canonical for the Church of Jesus Christ
of Latter-day Saints. Whether one believes him or not, the
discussion has focused on whether Smith's English texts represent
literal translations of extant source documents. On closer
inspection, though, Smith's translations are far more metaphysical
than linguistic. In Joseph Smith's Translation, Samuel Morris Brown
argues that these translations express the mystical power of
language and scripture to interconnect people across barriers of
space and time, especially in the developing Mormon temple liturgy.
He shows that Smith was devoted to an ancient
metaphysics-especially the principle of correspondence, the concept
of "as above, so below"-that provided an infrastructure for
bridging the human and the divine as well as for his textual
interpretive projects. Joseph Smith's projects of metaphysical
translation place Mormonism at the productive edge of the
transitions associated with shifts toward "secular modernity." This
transition into modern worldviews intensified, complexly, in
nineteenth-century America. The evolving legacies of Reformation
and Enlightenment were the sea in which early Mormons swam, says
Brown. Smith's translations and the theology that supported them
illuminate the power and vulnerability of the Mormon critique of
American culture in transition. This complex critique continues to
resonate and illuminate to the present day.
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