
Contents
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Introduction: The Communitarian Vision and Its Discontents Introduction: The Communitarian Vision and Its Discontents
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The Ebb and Flow of Early Mormon Community Building The Ebb and Flow of Early Mormon Community Building
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A Cooperative Almost-Kingdom in the West A Cooperative Almost-Kingdom in the West
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Echoes and Adaptations: The Continuing Negotiation of Mormon Community Echoes and Adaptations: The Continuing Negotiation of Mormon Community
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Notes Notes
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Bibliography Bibliography
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37 Communitarianism and Consecration in Mormonism
Get accessJ. Spencer Fluhman is assistant professor of history at Brigham Young University, where he teaches American religious history and Mormon history. He is the author of “A Peculiar People”: Anti-Mormonism and the Making of Religion in Nineteenth-Century America (2012) and is editor of the Mormon Studies Review.
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Published:10 December 2015
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Abstract
Throughout their tumultuous history, Mormons have sporadically invoked a flexible practice of property donation—or “consecration”—to provide for community needs, to insulate themselves economically from the host society, and to assimilate into that society. This chapter traces Mormon communitarianism across LDS history, from its radical beginnings amidst the ferment of pre–Civil War religious awakenings to its reformulation during the Cold War era, when Mormons largely integrated within the ranks of American political and economic conservatives. Over that span, Mormons were inspired by, fought over, depended upon, ignored, revived, and almost forgot their distinctive communitarian principles. Moreover, the living of the Mormon communitarian vision has been complicated by internal divisions (often involving the communitarian specifics themselves), changing relations with the American nation state, and economic transformations within and outside the church.
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