I have the greatest respect for Dr. Quinn. I cite his works. He doesn't publish anonymous hit pieces against the Church. He has a decent measure of integrity. But, had he had a defense to his excommunication he would have appeared to make it. He isn't a timid rabbit. And it wasn't a foregone conclusion; Grant Palmer appeared for his trial and was not excommunicated.
See this thread for how much crocket "respects" Quinn. I'll share just a few quotes:
http://mormondiscussions.com/discuss/vi ... ight=quinnI was also working at BYU when Quinn was readying his magic book for publication, and it depended largely upon the legitimacy of the Salamander letter. Whilst in the midst of proofing, I recall (it was in a very advanced stage), the Hoffman affair was exposed and Quinn was forced to rewrite the book without the benefit of a major prong in his argument. The result was a very poor work which set himself up for failure. I say all this because by the mid-1990s, Dr. Quinn was a very public figure. I don't think that folks can be guilty of "gossip" for talking about a very public figure whose orientation was self-outed long before the gossip.
I ran a social sciences statistical program to generate a random number of footnotes which I could check so that I could formulate a conclusion based upon significance and probabilities. Then, with those numbers, I ran to ground about 14 random footnotes. I can thus state that with a 1.5% margin of error there is a significant error in Quinn's footnotes.
I don't really dispute his qualifications as far as they go. I have some concerns, which the Wall Street Journal pointed out. He doesn't publish at academic powerhouses, thus his work isn't closely read by scholars before publication.
He is undisciplined, rather than disciplined. I have his works -- most of them -- and it seems to me that no editor has really put a heavy hand on his later works. His Clark books -- now there is fine writing. But, what happened after them? There's a lot more to being a historian than "indexing and cross-referencing notes."
Sorry. I may not be an academic, but I hire them. I know the difference between one published at academic houses and one not. Aside from his book on homosexuals (which is not Mormon history), Quinn is published either at church-sanctioned presses or the uber-vanity press known as Signature Books. I'd say, therefore, that if I were out looking to hire somebody to teach at my respectable university, Quinn just ain't gonna qualify -- the very point the Wall Street Journal made.
But, go ahead and publish your work at a vanity press. I'll be impressed.
I may not be entirely familiar with all of Quinn's books, but as far as I can tell he has never published at any academic publisher (except BYU) on any Mormon topic. He may indeed being a national expert on buggery, but he doesn't meet the usual qualifications as a historian if he hasn't published in academic journals.
Well, to be honest, I don't have Same Sex Dynamics but I read a heavily-edited chapter from the book in Dialogue. Based upon reviews I've read, it is not a book on Mormonism, but it has a chapter on Mormon buggery. The book qualifies him for expertise in what is known as queer studies, but not Mormonism.
A professor of English at NAU characterizes the work as: a richly impressionistic survey of American culture. It presents numerous cases, incidents and characters--some banal, some heartrending and some revolting--which provide a fascinating picture of varieties of social interchange common in the last century. I don't dispute that the entire work has an emphasis on Mormonism, but this is not Mormon history.
As far as the charge exists that LDS scholars have blackballed the poor boy, I would say that he certainly built the bedframe, made the mattress and the bed before lying down in it. Almost no peer-reviewing of his published works. One must wonder why he chose to publish his mangum opi at Signature.
There is no doubt that Quinn is a Mormon historian. But, only a minor unpublished one.