BYU Studies Quarterly

Keywords
Mormon studies, Joseph Smith, histories
Abstract
Undergirding Richard Bushman’s insightful paper is a profound recognition (and a reminder) that histories are the creations of authors, not photographs of the past. Every aspect of writing a history, from the selection of sources to the interpretation of those sources bears the imprint of the author. The profoundly precarious and contingent character of all reconstructions of the past led Roland Barthes to quip that biography is “a novel that dare not speak its name.” Clearly, this is an overstatement, but it does warn us away from an unhealthy critical complacency when engaging in studying written histories.
Recommended Citation
Underwood, Grant
(2005)
"Attempting to Situate Joseph Smith,"
BYU Studies Quarterly: Vol. 44:
Iss.
4, Article 6.
Available at:
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/byusq/vol44/iss4/6