Danish but not Lutheran: the impact of Mormonism on Danish cultural identity, 1850-1920

"This book concerns the introduction of Mormonism to Denmark, which led to an influx of Danish converts into Mormon and Utah society, but it is less about that immigrant infusion than about the impact of Mormonism on Denmark, which turns out to have been profound, not so much because of the ali...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Allen, Julie K. 1974- (Author)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Fernleihe:Fernleihe für die Fachinformationsdienste
Published: Salt Lake City The University of Utah Press [2017]
In:Year: 2017
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Denmark / Mormon Church / History 1850-1920
IxTheo Classification:KDH Christian sects
Further subjects:B Group Identity (Denmark)
B Nationalism Religious aspects Mormon Church
B Mormons (Denmark) History 20th century
B Mormon Church (Denmark) History 19th century
B Mormons (Denmark) History 19th century
B Nationalism (Denmark)
B Mormon Church (Denmark) History 20th century
Online Access: Table of Contents
Description
Summary:"This book concerns the introduction of Mormonism to Denmark, which led to an influx of Danish converts into Mormon and Utah society, but it is less about that immigrant infusion than about the impact of Mormonism on Denmark, which turns out to have been profound, not so much because of the alien LDS religion as because of the nature of Danish society. Mormon missionaries arrived in Denmark shortly after the establishment of religious freedom in a uniformly Lutheran nation. That helped engender a long, continuing process of renegotiating a Danish national identity distinct from Lutheranism. Mormon proselytizing and the thousands of Danes who converted to the LDS religion were a spur to thinking about national identity and a foil for many of the commentators, among whom two of the most prominent were the estranged brothers Kierkegaard--Søren and the Reverend Doctor Peter Christian--each of whom used discussion of Mormonism in their divergent arguments about Danish Lutheranism. Theirs was part of an extensive high-culture discourse, but Danish popular culture also had much to say about Mormons, in various media from nineteenth-century street ballads to early twentieth-century silent films. Julie K. Allen sees these particular historical matters as means to broach larger questions of the roles of religion and identity in a culture, particularly a relatively homogeneous one such as Denmark's"--Provided by publisher
Introduction -- Uncoupling Danish national identity from Lutheranism : the advent of religious difference in Denmark -- A tale of two Kierkegaards : responses to Mormonism by Denmark's cultural elites -- Mormons, Mormons! : provocative portrayals of Mormonism in Danish popular culture -- The price of conversion : cultural identity negotiations among early Danish Mormons -- Conclusion
Item Description:Includes bibliographical references (pages 273-281) and index
ISBN:1607815451