A comprehensive collection of links to articles and websites abourt Mormon anarchism (originally hosted on the AmericanCynic weblog).
- The Mormon Worker (in the Internet Archive)
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Online and print periodical. “Promoting Mormonism, Anarchism, and Pacifism”
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Example articles:
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“An Introduction to Mormon Anarchism” by William Van Wagenen from Issue 1.
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“Cooperation: A Common Principle of Mormonism and Anarchism” by Jason Brown from Issue 2.
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The Mormon Worker Blog — “A blog devoted to Mormonism and Radical Politics”
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Lattery Day nod to anarchy — an article in The Salt Lake Tribune about Vanwagenen and The Mormon Worker.
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The Wikipedia article about The Mormon Worker was deleted (19 April 2012) for notability reasons.
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- Choose the Radical
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A Salt Lake City Weekly cover story by Eric Peterson about LDS anarchists, feminists, liberals and Jack-Mormons.
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The LDS Anarchist Reading List is a follow-up article focusing on Mormon Anarchism
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- Rebirth of Mormon Radicalism?
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An article from a now-defunct weblog on the return of radical thinking within Mormonism.
- Writings by and about Dyer D. Lum
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Dyer Lum was a 19-century American anarchist. In the 1870’s he traveled around the country, including to Utah, as part of a congressional committee appointed to “inquire into the depression of labor.”
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John S. McCormick’s “An Anarchist Defends the Mormons: The Case of Dyer D. Lum” (Utah Historical Quarterly 44, 1976: 156-69) is an excellent summary of Lum’s analysis of the social and legal conflict between the Mormons and the United States. McCormick also quotes other 19th-century anarchists on the Mormon issue, including Benjamin Tucker. (Direct link to the archived PDF.)
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Utah and Its People: Facts and Statistics Bearing on the "Mormon Problem" (R.O. Ferrier & Company, 1882) is a booklet in which Lum defends Mormonism while praising its democratic society and cooperative economy.
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Social problems of today: or, the Mormon question in its economic aspects is an updated and much expanded version of Utah and Its people in which Lum continues to defend the Mormons against increased state repression. “The whole Mormon system, social, religious, industrial, is essentially based on two fundamental principles: cooperation in business and arbitration in disputes.” Lum contrasts those Mormon values with the mainstream American values of capitalism and civil litigation.
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In “Mormon and Caesar” (Liberty, April 17, 1886, #79), Lum argues that the motivational force behind the Edmunds Anti-Polygamy was to crush the cooperative economy set up by Mormons in Utah. (This article is something of a highly compressed version of the first chapter of The Social Problems of Today.)
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In “Mormon Co-operation,” (Liberty, July 3, 1886, #83), Lum responds to a sceptic about Mormon democracy and cooperation.
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My own “Dyer Lum on the Civil and Mormon Wars” presents an overly simplified theory of the relationship between slavery, Mormon cooperatives, and capitalism with application to some interesting events in American history
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- The case for Book of Mormon socialism
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An article in The Salt Lake Tribune by Troy Williams.
- Leland A Fetzer’s “Tolstoy and Mormonism” (Dialogue 6, 1971: 3-29)
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An essay which recounts Leo Tolstoy’s encounters with Mormonism.
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An article in the Deseret News, “Leo Tolstoy’s view of Mormons as teaching The American Religion” (Susan McCloud, 21 September 2014), based mostly on Fetzer’s paper mentions Tolstoy’s anarchism and meeting with Proudhon.
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- LDS Cooperative ‘one heart and one mind…with no poor among us’
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The front page features a Brigham Young quote and a José María Arizmendiarrieta quote together. Which is awesome.
- Wikipedia: United Order
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The church’s 19th century experiment with voluntary communism.
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See also Mormonism and the national debate over socialism and communism from the article on the history of the church.
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- Whither the Mormon Anarchist
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An article critical of Mormon anarchism.
- Anarchopedia: Mormon anarchism
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The very short entry in the Anarchopedia on Mormon anarchism.
- LDS-LEFT Yahoo! group
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This inactive mailing list seems to be all that’s left of the Mormons for Equality and Social Justice site. An old index page is available thanks to the Internet Archive.
If you find a dead link or know of a site that should be linked here, please either open an issue or fork this repository and submit a pull request with your proposed changes. Thank you!