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Yale Program in the History of the Book

A podcast from the Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library

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The Yale Program in the History of the Book brings together scholars across disciplines to explore the materiality of the written word over time and across cultures. A collaboration between Yale’s Department of English and Beinecke Rare Book and Manuscript Library, it offers seminar meetings for the Yale community and a series of public lectures by speakers across the field of book history. We also host a symposium each fall.
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Book of Mormon History provides easy access to current research for personal study. Study and learn the authentic context of the people, places, culture, language, and translation of the Book of Mormon through the eyes of scholars and researchers. Our mission is to bridge the gap between research and believers. Our vision is to foster a thriving belief in the historicity of the Book of Mormon and its translation. We value scholarship to help studies through a simple delivery.
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The Book of Martyrs, by John Foxe, is an English Protestant account of the persecutions of Protestants, many of whom had died for their beliefs within the decade immediately preceding its first publication. It was first published by John Day, in 1563. Lavishly illustrated with many woodcuts, it was the largest publishing project undertaken in Britain up to that time. Commonly known as, “Foxe’s Book of Martyrs”, the work’s full title begins with “Actes and Monuments of these Latter and Perill ...
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Ishmael died in the Book of Mormon and was buried in Arabia in a place named Nahom. Remarkably, archaeologists have discovered a funerary stela in the region of ancient NHM (Book of Mormon Nahom) with the name Ishmael inscribed on it. The limestone stela has the name of Ishmael, dates to the correct time period and comes from the region of NHM. The…
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The Book of Mormon was written by many different authors across hundreds of years. Not surprisingly, within the text the authors have unique voices, phrases, and usage consistent with themselves but independent from all others. Professor John Hilton III helps break down the intratextuality and intertextuality of ancient Book of Mormon authors. Usin…
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Discussing NEW archaeological discovery of an ancient temple within 4 miles of Jerusalem with researcher from Book of Mormon Central Stephen Smoot. Stephen provides his reasons for a scholastic approach to the Book of Mormon and outlines details from his article about both the archaeological site of Tel Moza [Motza] and how it provides another exam…
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Did Jesus Christ really live, die and resurrect by the Power of God leaving an empty tomb behind Him? Did Joseph Smith really receive golden plates, translating them by the Power of God leaving an empty stone box in a hill in New York? This episode compares the historical evidences for the Risen Jesus as asserted by leading apologists like William …
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The Book of Mormon is one in a billion. Actually, more accurately, it's one in one thousand billion, billion, billion, billion. Through Bayesian statistical analysis, Distinguished Professor Bruce E Dale from Michigan State University explains the historical and ancient authenticity of the Book of Mormon with a direct response to critics and prescr…
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Let's blow up our understanding of the rending of the rocks in the Book of Mormon. Geologist, scientist, and researcher Jerry Grover opens our understanding of the destruction of 3rd Nephi and other shaking and quaking events in the Book of Mormon text. From volcanoes to earthquakes, Jerry reviews the criteria from the text then applies it to a rea…
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Fly over the Book of Mormon lands and travel with Mormon unlocking key elements of the inside landscape and events. How wide was the narrow neck? Why does understanding city and battle locations matter? Internal Book of Mormon map expert, PhD Tyler Griffin of BYU and Co-Director of VirtualScriptures.org lends his expertise in this captivating discu…
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Panel from the 2018-19 program, "The Thing Is," in which visiting speakers and Yale faculty explore the idea of the text as material object.January 30, 2019, 5-6pm, Beinecke Library mezzanine.Chair: Catherine DeRose (Manager, Yale Digital Humanities Laboratory)Whitney Trettien (Assistant Professor, University of Pennsylvania)Andrew S. Brown (PhD Ca…
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Science, faith and reason - a balancing act for ages. Believers love the Book of Mormon for spiritual content, but what is the value of studying the historical & academic side of the text? President of The Church of Jesus Christ, Apostle Joel Gehly, gives his thoughts. Book of Mormon History provides easy access to current research for further stud…
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Panel 1 of the 2018-19 program, "The Thing Is," in which visiting speakers and Yale faculty explore the idea of the text as material object. Chair: Michael Warner (Seymour H. Knox Professor of English, Professor of American Studies, Yale)Bill Brown (Karla Scherer Distinguished Service Professor in American Culture, University of Chicago)Marta Figle…
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In the second episode of Book History, Illuminated, Leah introduces Robert Darnton's Communications Circuit, and explains why it is, and why it is not, so great. She talks about Thomas R. Adams and Nicolas Barker's response to Darnton's Circuit, Pride and Prejudice, and Polish samizdat. What's samizdat? Listen and find out.Intro theme samples speec…
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