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MORMONS, GENDER, AND THE NEW COMMERCIAL ENTERTAINMENTS, 1890–1920
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 23 June 2017
Abstract
In the early twentieth century, new forms of commercial entertainment—dance halls, movie theaters, amusement halls and parks, saloons and the like—emerged in urban areas, providing new ways for young Americans to amuse themselves. This essay explores the distinctive Mormon response to these new forms of amusement. Mormon leaders took up other progressive reformers’ concerns about early twentieth-century amusements, but refracted them through a distinctively Mormon lens that was at once gendered and uniquely religious. Mormons rejected the progressive double standard that sought to constrain women's, more than men's, participation in these new entertainments, focusing on restraining both genders equally. While many progressives held women more responsible for the sexual transgressions they worried resulted from these new forms of entertainment, Mormons held men and women equally accountable. Moreover, while other progressives sought (and largely failed) to provide alternative, more wholesome, entertainment for American youth, Mormons successfully provided family and Church amusements that kept their youth safely ensconced within the Church community. By the end of the 1910s, Church leaders had officially institutionalized the provision of amusement for its members and the Church formally became a social as well as religious organization.
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References
NOTES
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64 The nature of sexuality, for Mormons, is determined by the “plan of salvation,” the process by which one becomes like God. In the pre-existence, literal spirit children of an embodied God await physical birth on earth to earthly parents. Sexuality on earth, then, fulfills the functions of providing physical “tabernacles” (bodies) for God's spirit children. Mormon marriage is considered eternal, continuing into an embodied afterlife. Sexuality is part of this afterlife, as those who become like God provide “spirit bodies” for their spirit children.
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68 Joseph F. Smith, “Editor's Table: True Love,” 829.
69 Joseph F. Smith, “Unchastity the Dominant Evil of the Age,” [Salt Lake City: The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, 1917?], 9. Available at the Church History Library, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Salt Lake City, Utah [hereafter cited as Church History Library].
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128 Smith, “Editor's Table: The Home and the Child,” 302–3.
129 Fourth Ward amusement committee minutes, February 1902–March 1903, Church History Library.
130 There are quite a few remaining advertisements for events like this. For a few representative examples, see “A Farewell Missionary Entertainment will be Given in the Nineteenth Ward Meeting House …,” 1909, Church History Library; “Grand Entertainment by the Seventeenth Ward Primary Association, Thursday and Friday, December 13 and 14, Seventeenth Ward,” 19--?, Church History Library; “You are Cordially Invited to a Grand Vaudeville Entertainment in the Emigration Ward Hall …,” 1918?, Church History Library.
131 “You are Cordially Invited to a Grand Vaudeville Entertainment in the Emigration Ward Hall …,” 1918?. See also Twenty-Second Ward, Salt Lake Stake, “A Grand Entertainment and Dance Will Be Held in the 22nd Ward Meeting House” (The Human Culture Co., Printers, Salt Lake City), Church History Library; Fourteenth Ward Meeting House, Thursday, May 21, 1903 …,” Church History Library.
132 “Editor's Table,” The Improvement Era (Jan. 1916): 268.
133 Kimball, Sports in Zion, 38–45.
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136 “A Call to the Women of the Church,” 41.
137 “A Call to the Women of the Church,” 42.
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142 Alexander, “Between Revivalism,” 31–32. For a lengthier discussion of the “recreation building boom” among Mormons, see Kimball, Sports in Zion, 57–82.
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