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Originally Posted by bytebear
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Actually, I got them from the same Fawn Brodie Wikipedia article I had cited earlier.
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But you fail to mention the thesis of the article. Here's the first line:
Joseph Smith: Rough Stone Rolling, Richard Lyman Bushman's biography of the Mormon prophet Joseph Smith, is the crowning achievement of the new Mormon history
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The Brodie Wikipedia article pertains to her work, not Bushman's book. Therefore I didn't "fail to mention" anything. But thanks for trying.
Also if you'll review my posts, I never said Bushman's book was without merit. It is a perfectly acceptable biography for believers, if that's your thing. Just take Brodie's secular approach, whitewash and spin the controversies through a believer's lens and, viola, you have Bushman's book. Which is probably better than nothing, for church members. Church members needed something, after all, and it's amazing that it took so long for someone to produce a biography from the LDS perspective.
True, the Fawn Brodie book didn't exactly reinforce LDS beliefs. But it doesn't disparage them, either. It simply presents the evidence and draws the most reasonable conclusions. The Bushman book, however,
does reinforce everything that church members want to hear, and provides pat answers to (or glosses over) every single controversy, by the numbers. Which is a step forward for the church, at least.
If reinforcement of faith is what you need from a biography of Joseph Smith, then by all means, stick with the Bushman book. But don't misrepresent or slander the Brodie book simply because you take exception to her secular approach. Jan Shipps has no qualms recognizing its value, importance, objectivity and accuracy, so, why do you? Interesting that you'll apparently accept her opinion of Bushman's book, but not of Brodie's.