Between Mountain and Lake: An Urban Mormon Country

abstract: In "Between Mountain and Lake: an Urban Mormon Country," I identify a uniquely Mormon urban tradition that transcends simple village agrarianism. This tradition encompasses the distinctive ways in which Mormons have thought about cities, appropriating popular American urban forms...

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Other Authors: Andersen, Rebecca (Author)
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36039
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spelling ndltd-asu.edu-item-360392018-06-22T03:06:46Z Between Mountain and Lake: An Urban Mormon Country abstract: In "Between Mountain and Lake: an Urban Mormon Country," I identify a uniquely Mormon urban tradition that transcends simple village agrarianism. This tradition encompasses the distinctive ways in which Mormons have thought about cities, appropriating popular American urban forms to articulate their faith's central beliefs, tenants, and practices, from street layout to home decorating. But if an urban Mormon experience has as much validity as an agrarian one, how have the two traditions articulated themselves over time? What did the city mean for nineteenth-century Mormons? Did these meanings change in the twentieth-century, particularly following World War II when the nation as a whole underwent rapid suburbanization? How did Mormon understandings of the environment effect the placement of their villages and cities? What consequences did these choices have for their children, particularly when these places rapidly suburbanized? Traditionally, Zion has been linked to a particular place. This localized dimension to an otherwise spiritual and utopian ideal introduces environmental negotiation and resource utilization. Mormon urban space is, as French thinker Henri Lefebvre would suggest, culturally constructed, appropriated and consumed. On a fundamental level, Mormon spaces tack between the extremes of theocracy and secularism, communalism and capitalism and have much to reveal about how Mormonism has defined gender roles and established racial hierarchies. Mormon cultural landscapes both manifest a sense of identity and place, as well as establish relationships with the past. Dissertation/Thesis Andersen, Rebecca (Author) Gray, Susan E. (Advisor) Rugh, Susan S. (Committee member) Pyne, Stephen (Committee member) Arizona State University (Publisher) History Urban planning Religious history Mormon suburbs Wasatch Front eng 277 pages Doctoral Dissertation History 2015 Doctoral Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36039 http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ All Rights Reserved 2015
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic History
Urban planning
Religious history
Mormon
suburbs
Wasatch Front
spellingShingle History
Urban planning
Religious history
Mormon
suburbs
Wasatch Front
Between Mountain and Lake: An Urban Mormon Country
description abstract: In "Between Mountain and Lake: an Urban Mormon Country," I identify a uniquely Mormon urban tradition that transcends simple village agrarianism. This tradition encompasses the distinctive ways in which Mormons have thought about cities, appropriating popular American urban forms to articulate their faith's central beliefs, tenants, and practices, from street layout to home decorating. But if an urban Mormon experience has as much validity as an agrarian one, how have the two traditions articulated themselves over time? What did the city mean for nineteenth-century Mormons? Did these meanings change in the twentieth-century, particularly following World War II when the nation as a whole underwent rapid suburbanization? How did Mormon understandings of the environment effect the placement of their villages and cities? What consequences did these choices have for their children, particularly when these places rapidly suburbanized? Traditionally, Zion has been linked to a particular place. This localized dimension to an otherwise spiritual and utopian ideal introduces environmental negotiation and resource utilization. Mormon urban space is, as French thinker Henri Lefebvre would suggest, culturally constructed, appropriated and consumed. On a fundamental level, Mormon spaces tack between the extremes of theocracy and secularism, communalism and capitalism and have much to reveal about how Mormonism has defined gender roles and established racial hierarchies. Mormon cultural landscapes both manifest a sense of identity and place, as well as establish relationships with the past. === Dissertation/Thesis === Doctoral Dissertation History 2015
author2 Andersen, Rebecca (Author)
author_facet Andersen, Rebecca (Author)
title Between Mountain and Lake: An Urban Mormon Country
title_short Between Mountain and Lake: An Urban Mormon Country
title_full Between Mountain and Lake: An Urban Mormon Country
title_fullStr Between Mountain and Lake: An Urban Mormon Country
title_full_unstemmed Between Mountain and Lake: An Urban Mormon Country
title_sort between mountain and lake: an urban mormon country
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.36039
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