What is the sense of place of Mormon agricultural landscapes? That is to say, what makes an LDS Church-owned welfare farm or a Mormon family garden meaningful to those who interact with it? In formulating a partial answer to this question, this thesis demonstrates how religious ideals of self-reliance and social welfare explicitly define Mormon agricultural landscapes, providing a sacred sense of their purpose to those who work and benefit from them. However, these sacred landscapes are complicated by developments of industrial agricultural equipment, corporate institutions, and urban demographics, which tend to isolate people from each other and the land they live from while developing in them a false sense of independence and sustainabili...
In 1862, Orson B. Adams settled in Harrisburg, Utah. He and his family were part of a movement by th...
The spiritual part of this earth is as powerful, maybe more powerful than the physical life that we ...
Nature is both powerfully attractive and powerfully repellent, 1 describes the Western Paradox as ...
The gardens of early Mormon pioneers are a unique cultural resource in the western United States, bu...
Typescript (photocopy).Mormons and the agrarian West seem to be almost synonymous to some. The Mormo...
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was founded by Joseph Smith in 1830, but its connect...
abstract: In "Between Mountain and Lake: an Urban Mormon Country," I identify a uniquely Mormon urba...
Until the last half century, land development patterns in the Intermountain West were designed after...
This study has looked behind the mask of nineteenth-century theocracy to see Mormons in the Great Ba...
The present study suggests, in contrast to community dissolution theories, that community is maintai...
.Nineteenth-century Mormon settlers in Utah combined a unique set of religious beliefs with a ferven...
This paper proposes a return to the land and reconnection of spiritual practices through ethical tea...
This research investigates the influence of different religious traditions, including the Church of ...
When Mormon settlers arrived in the Great Basin in 1847, the region was Mexican territory notable ma...
A community\u27s physical environment embodies distinct natural and built elements, which hold meani...
In 1862, Orson B. Adams settled in Harrisburg, Utah. He and his family were part of a movement by th...
The spiritual part of this earth is as powerful, maybe more powerful than the physical life that we ...
Nature is both powerfully attractive and powerfully repellent, 1 describes the Western Paradox as ...
The gardens of early Mormon pioneers are a unique cultural resource in the western United States, bu...
Typescript (photocopy).Mormons and the agrarian West seem to be almost synonymous to some. The Mormo...
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints was founded by Joseph Smith in 1830, but its connect...
abstract: In "Between Mountain and Lake: an Urban Mormon Country," I identify a uniquely Mormon urba...
Until the last half century, land development patterns in the Intermountain West were designed after...
This study has looked behind the mask of nineteenth-century theocracy to see Mormons in the Great Ba...
The present study suggests, in contrast to community dissolution theories, that community is maintai...
.Nineteenth-century Mormon settlers in Utah combined a unique set of religious beliefs with a ferven...
This paper proposes a return to the land and reconnection of spiritual practices through ethical tea...
This research investigates the influence of different religious traditions, including the Church of ...
When Mormon settlers arrived in the Great Basin in 1847, the region was Mexican territory notable ma...
A community\u27s physical environment embodies distinct natural and built elements, which hold meani...
In 1862, Orson B. Adams settled in Harrisburg, Utah. He and his family were part of a movement by th...
The spiritual part of this earth is as powerful, maybe more powerful than the physical life that we ...
Nature is both powerfully attractive and powerfully repellent, 1 describes the Western Paradox as ...