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Joseph Smith's Gold Plates

A Cultural History

Audiobook
1 of 3 copies available
1 of 3 copies available
According to Joseph Smith, in September of 1823 an angel appeared to him and directed him to a hill near his home. Buried there Smith found a box containing a stack of thin metal sheets, gold in color and covered with what appeared to be ancient engravings. Exactly four years later, the angel instructed Smith to translate the plates into English. When the text was published, a new religion was born. The plates have had a long and active life, and the question of their reality has hovered over them from the beginning. Months before the Book of Mormon was published, newspapers began reporting on the discovery of a Golden Bible. Within a few years, over a hundred articles had appeared. Critics denounced Smith as a charlatan for claiming to have a wondrous object that he refused to show while believers countered by pointing to witnesses who said they saw the plates. Two hundred years later, the mystery of the gold plates remains. In this book, renowned historian of Mormonism Richard Lyman Bushman offers a cultural history of the gold plates. Bushman examines how the plates have been imagined by both believers and critics—and by treasure-seekers, novelists, artists, scholars, and others—from Smith's first encounter with them to the present. Why have they been remembered, and how have they been used? And why do they remain objects of fascination to this day? By examining these questions, Bushman sheds new light on Mormon history and the role of enchantment in the modern world.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      September 11, 2023
      Historian Bushman (Joseph Smith) offers a meticulous study of the gold plates that Joseph Smith, the founder of Mormonism, reported discovering near his home in Palmyra, N.Y., in 1823. Bushman considers the perspectives of both believers and skeptics concerning the plates’ existence. At the time, according to Bushman, generally contemptuous public commentary referred to them as a “Golden Bible” (though Smith himself rarely described the plates as being made from gold) and considered Smith’s assertion of their existence to undermine his credibility even more than his claim of visitations from the angel Moroni (who guided him to the plates’ original location buried in a stone box on the side of a hill). Among his followers, on the other hand, belief in the existence of the plates became a litmus test of Mormon faith. For readers uninitiated in Mormon culture, Bushman clearly explains the significance of the proofs that members of the Church of Latter-Day Saints laid out over the course of the 19th century to establish the legitimacy of the plates, including the publication of accounts by 11 people who saw them during their 21 months in Smith’s possession (after which, he attested, he returned them to Moroni). Thoroughly researched and accessibly written, this is sure to be considered a definitive work on the subject.

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  • English

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