Mormon Studies Review
Keywords
religion, violence, Mormonism, narrative, choice
Abstract
John Krakauer’s 2003 best-seller, Under the Banner of Heaven, played upon a common narrative told in sections of American culture— a story that claimed that some religions are inherently violent. In Krakauer’s work, of course, the group under consideration was Mormonism, and his narrative was encapsulated in his pithy subtitle, “A Story of Violent Faith.”1 Patrick Mason’s new book fundamentally contradicts Krakauer’s salacious claim. Mason argues that all religious groups, including the Mormon tradition, contain “multiple and complex sources—scriptures, histories, myths, social networks, authority structures, and cosmologies that can be mobilized in the service of either violence or non-violence” (78). People choose how to use these resources, and there is nothing inevitable about their choices or even what resources they utilize over others. Within this structuring framework, Mason, in four succinct chapters numbering only eighty pages, shows how Mormons have deployed their tradition over time in regard to violence and nonviolence.
BYU ScholarsArchive Citation
Howlett, David J.
(2022)
"Review: Patrick Q. Mason. Mormonism and Violence: The Battles of Zion. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2019.,"
Mormon Studies Review: Vol. 9:
No.
1, Article 18.
Available at:
https://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/msr2/vol9/iss1/18