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B.H. Roberts, Moral Geography, and the Making of a Modern Racist

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A transdisciplinary Mormon history, this book is a work of American religious history, theology, science history, and cultural and historical geography.

It deconstructs the "race" creationism, White supremacy, and Christian imperialism of leading interwar Mormon theologian B.H.

Roberts. Roberts hoped to introduce the front-rank post-Darwinian, scientific, and philosophical postulates of his time-polygeny, preadamitism, electromagnetism, idealism, the multiverse, infinity, and interstellar travel-to an increasingly fundamentalist Mormon establishment.

Church authorities, however, including eventual "prophet" Joseph Fielding Smith Jr., proscribed and rejected Roberts' modernist manuscript, The Truth, The, Way, The Life: An Elementary Treatise on Theology, circa 1930.

Paradoxically, however, Roberts' thinking appeared uncited in Smith's 1954 theology, Man, His Origin and Destiny.

Here, Smith accelerated Roberts' racism toward Afro-Americans, while reviling science, philosophy, and free thought.

This book contextualizes all such fundamentalist Mormon thinking within today's struggle for social and environmental justice, and especially the Black Lives Matter movement.

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£64.99
Product Details
1527578461 / 9781527578463
Hardback
01/03/2022
United Kingdom
English
355 pages
21 cm
Professional & Vocational Learn More