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Original Articles

Meetinghouses in the Mormon Mind: Ideology, Architecture, and Turbulent Streams of an Expanding Church*

Pages 323-355 | Received 21 Apr 2010, Published online: 04 Nov 2019
 

Abstract

ABSTRACT. Early work by D. W. Meinig delimiting “The Mormon Culture Region” focused on the spread of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter‐day Saints (lds) in a core, domain, and sphere scheme that recognized diffusion of a fast‐growing group bent on shifting its station from cultural edge to religious mainstream. Such a changeover from fringe belief to international force lacks any widely circulated rule book. The lds and its followers today extend influence through diverse, distinct pathways: making missionaries a recognizable global force, offering education on church‐controlled university campuses, emanating wholesomeness, entering high‐security federal service, and attaining national political power. But nothing so locks in an lds message as the standard‐plan meetinghouses, in uniform styles, that mark church presence in North America and other continents. This work analyzes that architecture and examines its fit within lds expansion and presentation of self, not just in the Salt Lake City church but even as imitated by outcast outliers.

* Contributions to this essay induced by long consultations with Peter Meyer are too many to spell out individually; additional thanks are owed to D. W. Meinig for an inspiring example, to two reviewers, to Jack and Linda Newell, David J. Larson, Barbara Gerland, and other friends who advised various surgical tucks, many herein implemented.

1 Dr. Starrs is the Foundation Professor of Geography at the University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557.

* Contributions to this essay induced by long consultations with Peter Meyer are too many to spell out individually; additional thanks are owed to D. W. Meinig for an inspiring example, to two reviewers, to Jack and Linda Newell, David J. Larson, Barbara Gerland, and other friends who advised various surgical tucks, many herein implemented.

1 Dr. Starrs is the Foundation Professor of Geography at the University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557.

Notes

* Contributions to this essay induced by long consultations with Peter Meyer are too many to spell out individually; additional thanks are owed to D. W. Meinig for an inspiring example, to two reviewers, to Jack and Linda Newell, David J. Larson, Barbara Gerland, and other friends who advised various surgical tucks, many herein implemented.

1 Dr. Starrs is the Foundation Professor of Geography at the University of Nevada, Reno, Nevada 89557.

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