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Historical Narrative, Literary Narrative— Expelling Poetics from the Republic of History

TitleHistorical Narrative, Literary Narrative— Expelling Poetics from the Republic of History
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication1996
AuthorsGoff, Alan
JournalJournal of Book of Mormon Studies
Volume5
Issue1
Pagination50-102
Date PublishedSpring 1996
KeywordsHistoriography; History; Mosiah; Narrative; Poetry
Abstract

Postivist historiography has always maintained an impermeable boundary between history and literature. But positivism is itself a historical sediment whose time is now past. Recent literary theory and historiography emphasize the continuities between history and literature. Under the domination of historiography by a positivist epistemology (from about 1880 to 1960), history attempted to free itself from its literary heritage; more recently theorists from a number of disciplines have recognized that history, both ancient and modem, has been informed by literary motifs, themes, and strategies. The repetition of the exodus literary pattern, for example, through the Bible, the Book of Mormon, and Christian history does nothing to bring into question the historical status of the events. The exodus patterns evident in Mosiah do not force the Book of Mormon to surrender historical claims just because they also happen to be literary.

URLhttps://scholarsarchive.byu.edu/jbms/vol5/iss1/2