Ray A wrote:So are we going to see something like Arrington's formerly proposed 16 volume History of the Church straight out of "Camelot"?
I doubt it. And, as you know, most of the proposed volumes have since been published so there's probably no need for a similar project—at least before 2030. The current Joseph Smith Papers Project is in many ways even more ambitious than Arrington's proposed multivolume centennial history. I don't think we'll see another similar large-scale project until that one is more or less complete. But I could be wrong.
Providing resources is one thing, but do you think we're going to see more Bushman-type histories coming from Mormon historians?
I want to think so, but there aren't that many Bushman-type historians out there. Right now I think Terryl Givens is writing the closest thing to Bushman-style histories, but he's a literary critic whose recent focus has been cultural history—or in the case of the Book of Mormon, reception history.
I don't expect to see much in the way of densely researched tomes on early Mormon history. I'd heard, years ago, that Scott Kenney and Richard Van Wagoner were working on a multivolume biography of Joseph Smith, but it doesn't seem to be forthcoming—and in any case those are non-institutional scholars.
I think the number of LDS historians inclined to write "dialogically" (i.e., "Bushman-style") is growing, but I don't think we'll see another flowering of Mormon historical scholarship, like we saw in the late 60s, 70s and 80s, anytime soon. I'd love to be wrong about this though.