
Contents
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Farnsworth’s First Vision Farnsworth’s First Vision
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Televisual Mormonism Televisual Mormonism
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Standard Consumption Standard Consumption
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Patriotic Mothers Patriotic Mothers
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Model Americans Model Americans
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Tuned In Tuned In
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Electronic Gathering Electronic Gathering
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Conclusion Conclusion
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Cite
Abstract
The sixth chapter shows how broadcast media could correlate the look and image of the church through teletechnologies and especially against the specter of communism and countercultural movements from the 1950s to 1970s. It connects the standards and logic of broadcast technology with the concept and flavor of Mormon Correlation, which was a sweeping reform that sought to standardize curriculum, doctrine, and practice beginning in the 1960s. The necessity of standards and their discursive resonance permeated Mormon homes and practice and was entangled with TV. From technical and national standards of NTSC (National Television System Committee) to Mormon dress codes and unified instruction, standards—both US living standards and church moral ones—were meant to be attained and maintained as a sign of strength, nationalism, and godliness. The technology allowed correlated and standardized members to be gathered from their very living rooms by receiving the logic and effect of broadcast, as well as interacting and acting on the content through bodily techniques. This technical and religious tuning-in created a vision of twentieth-century Latter-day Saints as American families and provided an expansive system for their governance and for gathering the Saints scattered abroad.
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