Mike Quinn

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_rcrocket

Post by _rcrocket »

Blixa wrote:How deliciously ironic. I am reading this thread and replying to it from the Reading Room of Yale's Beinecke Library where I am working on the Mike Quinn papers. To quote the historian of Mormon studies I'm working with, Don Bradley, the Quinn papers are a "friggin' goldmine of riches." I concur. The depth and scope of his research is astonishing (as is his disciplined ability to index and cross reference his notes--something which speaks to his meticulousness as a researcher).


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."
_Mister Scratch
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Post by _Mister Scratch »

rcrocket wrote:
Blixa wrote:How deliciously ironic. I am reading this thread and replying to it from the Reading Room of Yale's Beinecke Library where I am working on the Mike Quinn papers. To quote the historian of Mormon studies I'm working with, Don Bradley, the Quinn papers are a "friggin' goldmine of riches." I concur. The depth and scope of his research is astonishing (as is his disciplined ability to index and cross reference his notes--something which speaks to his meticulousness as a researcher).


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.


Which scholars do you have in mind? Actual historians and academics, or the clowns at FARMS?
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Post by _skippy the dead »

rcrocket wrote:
Rollo Tomasi wrote:
rcrocket wrote:What academic publisher has Dr. Quinn published his books at? Name one.

Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.


Which work? Any others?


For our sports fans at home, here's a recap:

Bob: Name an academic publisher

Rollo: Okay - Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois

Bob (to himself): *crap - I should have known the answer before I asked the question. I know, I'll move the target, then maybe nobody will notice that my challenge was met.*

Bob: Which work? Any others?

Bob (to himself): *There, that oughta do it. Now I can get back to accusing anonymous posters of cowardice and condemning them to hell.*
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_Blixa
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Post by _Blixa »

rcrocket wrote: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."


Really? There's more to it than that? What exactly is your problem, Bob?

I've worked in academia for 20 + years. I think I might have an informed opinion on scholarly skills and discipline. I'm looking---right now----at a series of card indexes that blow my mind in terms of their level of thoroughness, order and usefulness. This kind of painstaking care taken with research notes, care so that the notes themselves are not just self-readable but actuallyuseful to other scholars is highly unusual to say the least. Quinn's work is marked by a kind of scholarly generosity with his time and material I've only seen elsewhere in the work of Dale Morgan. This is work done entirely outside of the kind of concerns, with academic brand names for example, that seem to mark your retorts.

I don't care if you dispute Quinn's interpretations or pontificate about "style"---whatever. On the most basic, and probably most important in the long run, level, Quinn is an impressive scholar. On another level, how one understands what scholarly work is---individual property or collective commons---Quinn's work is unusually democratic.
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_guy sajer
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Re: Mike Quinn

Post by _guy sajer »

rcrocket wrote:
Jason Bourne wrote:What % have you run to ground?


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.

Or, perhaps, instead I ran to ground about three of them relating to my ancestors and struck gold on all of them.

I can't recall which I did. One or the other.

Do you have examples per chance?


Not really; they related to some crimes in Springville and Spanish Fork. Indictments, convictions.

It seems odd to me that one would reference a work that one does not think is fairly accurate in what is says or portrays.


It seems odd that you think it would be odd. I may think Bertrand Russell is an illogical atheist but if he says something about Christianity with which I agree, and it supports my thesis, you bet I'd cite him because it is coming from the enemies' camp. Citing people of like mind is like preaching to the choir.

rcrocket


I'd be curious how you calculated the 1.5% margin or error. I'm guessing that you pulled this number out of the air.
God . . . "who mouths morals to other people and has none himself; who frowns upon crimes, yet commits them all; who created man without invitation, . . . and finally, with altogether divine obtuseness, invites this poor, abused slave to worship him ..."
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Post by _Rollo Tomasi »

rcrocket wrote:
Rollo Tomasi wrote:
rcrocket wrote:What academic publisher has Dr. Quinn published his books at? Name one.

Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.


Which work? Any others?

Same Sex Dynamics, published in 1996 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.
"Moving beyond apologist persuasion, LDS polemicists furiously (and often fraudulently) attack any non-traditional view of Mormonism. They don't mince words -- they mince the truth."

-- Mike Quinn, writing of the FARMSboys, in "Early Mormonism and the Magic World View," p. x (Rev. ed. 1998)
_Rollo Tomasi
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Post by _Rollo Tomasi »

Rollo Tomasi wrote:Same Sex Dynamics, published in 1996 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.

Here are a few more:

He's published essays in Under an Open Sky: Rethinking America's Western Past (Norton, 1992), Fundamentalisms and Society: Reclaiming the Sciences, the Family, and Education (University of Chicago Press, 1993), New Encyclopedia of the American West (Yale University Press, 1998), and American National Biography (Oxford University Press, forthcoming).
"Moving beyond apologist persuasion, LDS polemicists furiously (and often fraudulently) attack any non-traditional view of Mormonism. They don't mince words -- they mince the truth."

-- Mike Quinn, writing of the FARMSboys, in "Early Mormonism and the Magic World View," p. x (Rev. ed. 1998)
_John Larsen
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Re: Mike Quinn

Post by _John Larsen »

rcrocket wrote:
Jason Bourne wrote:What % have you run to ground?


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.

Or, perhaps, instead I ran to ground about three of them relating to my ancestors and struck gold on all of them.

I can't recall which I did. One or the other.

[


You can't make any statistically significant claims about the population based on a single sample. You should know that. Besides, how did you arrive at n=14? What was the null hypothesis?

John
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Post by _Bond...James Bond »

Rollo Tomasi wrote:
Rollo Tomasi wrote:Same Sex Dynamics, published in 1996 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois.

Here are a few more:

He's published essays in Under an Open Sky: Rethinking America's Western Past (Norton, 1992), Fundamentalisms and Society: Reclaiming the Sciences, the Family, and Education (University of Chicago Press, 1993), New Encyclopedia of the American West (Yale University Press, 1998), and American National Biography (Oxford University Press, forthcoming).


U. of Chicago? Yale? Oxford? Never heard of any of these places.

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"Whatever appears to be against the Book of Mormon is going to be overturned at some time in the future. So we can be pretty open minded."-charity 3/7/07
_rcrocket

Post by _rcrocket »

So, the greatest Mormon historian ever has published one book at an academic publisher? And that one is on homosexuality, not specifically Mormonism?

Dale Morgan, Juanita Brooks, Thomas Alexander, Leonard Arrington, Orson F. Whitney -- move over. Anti-Mormons think you are dolts, even though you are heavily published.
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