Skip to main content

Home/ Writing about Literature in the Digital Age/ Group items tagged LDS

Rss Feed Group items tagged

Carlie Wallentine

Mormon Literature and Criticism - 1 views

  •  
    I mostly liked the 8th paragraph about how critics looking at any literature from an LDS perspective need to leave physical evidence of their work, so future LDS critics can build upon it and stop re-inventing the wheel.
Gideon Burton

"Things as they really are" CES Fireside 2009 - Bednar - 0 views

  •  
    LDS apostle David Bednar cautions youth about respecting the role of their physical presence within relationships.
Aly Rutter

LDS eBooks - 1 views

  •  
    Opportunities to publish online literature to an LDS audience
Bri Zabriskie

E-Books - 1 views

  •  
    LDS church and ebooks. Thought you'd think this was interesting
James Matthews

How targeting LDS males for declining marriage rates misses the mark - 2 views

  •  
    Interesting piece here
Ben M

The Nameless Mormon Blogosphere | Times & Seasons - 1 views

  • Latter Day Blogs is pretty good, but the strength of St. Blog’s is that it suggests a place in which this online community exists.
  • They used to refer to on-line LDS posters as members of the virtual ward.
  • Some object on the grounds that a choir is a better analogy than a space. Note that the founding metaphor of the blog community is spacial–the blogosphere. Note also that a choir is rather more directed and harmonious than we expect to be, that admission to it is controlled by the choir whereas admission to the sacred precincts of a tabernacle is at least in conception controlled by God. While singing ought to be an act of praise, we tend to think of it as entertainment, whereas we are always aware of our presence before God in a tabernacle. Getting down to specifics, the Mormon Tabernacle Choir is a somewhat unhip public relations gesture. It serves to present an friendly face to an antipathetic world, and is thus at root defensive. The tabernacle, on the other hand, is the sacred space that conceptually contains the world; it is at root expansive.
  • ...1 more annotation...
  • I thought about that, Jim. Here’s my response: first, if we were calling ourselves the Tabernacle I think I’d object. Bloggernacle tones down the sacred meaning enough, I think, while still keeping some of those overtones of acting before the eyes of God. Also, in Mormonism, the Tabernacle isn’t exactly a temple. It’s a holy building and holy space, true, but one in which musical concerts and Journal of Discourse talks on farming methods can still be appropriate. It’s almost the Mormon Public Square.
  •  
    This is the blog post where the "bloggernacle" got its name back in 2004
Andrea Ostler

The Value of a Good Name - 2 views

  •  
    I just got called to speak in church on Sunday about "my family's good name." I found this talk, but any other ideas would be helpful---I just don't know what to do with it!
Nyssa Silvester

"The Class That Wouldn't Die" | Mormon Artist - 3 views

  •  
    Article about the history of science fiction at BYU.
1 - 9 of 9
Showing 20 items per page