Robin Scott Jensen
Autor von The Joseph Smith Papers: Revelations and Translations, Volume 1: Manuscript Revelation Books
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Werke von Robin Scott Jensen
The Joseph Smith Papers: Revelations and Translations, Volume 1: Manuscript Revelation Books (2011) — Herausgeber — 97 Exemplare
The Joseph Smith Papers: Revelations and Translations, Volume 2: Published Revelations (2009) — Herausgeber — 42 Exemplare
Joseph Smith Papers, Revelations and Translations, V. 4: Book of Abraham and Related Manuscripts (2018) — Herausgeber — 14 Exemplare
The Joseph Smith Papers, Revelations and Translations, Volume 5: Original Manuscript of the Book of Mormon (2021) — Herausgeber — 12 Exemplare
Zugehörige Werke
Revelations in Context: The Stories Behind the Sections of the Doctrine and Covenants (2016) — Mitwirkender — 73 Exemplare
The Joseph Smith Papers: Revelations and Translations, Volume 3, Part 1: Printer's Manuscript of the Book of Mormon, 1… (2015) — Herausgeber — 21 Exemplare
The Joseph Smith Papers: Revelations and Translations, Volume 3 Part 2 (2015) — Herausgeber — 17 Exemplare
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Wissenswertes
- Rechtmäßiger Name
- Jensen, Robin Scott
- Geschlecht
- male
- Wohnorte
- Salt Lake City, Utah, USA
- Ausbildung
- University of Utah (PhD|History|2019)
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee (MA|Library and Information Science|2009)
Brigham Young University (MA|History|2005)
Institute for the Editing of Historical Documents (2007) - Berufe
- historian
archivist - Beziehungen
- Jensen, Emily W. (wife)
- Organisationen
- The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
LDS Church History Department (editorial board)
Joseph Smith Papers Project (associate managing historian|project archivist)
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As with all the books in the JSP series, there is a great volume introduction that gives the historical background and an overview of what the volume contains. It explains how the mummies and papyri came into the possession of Joseph Smith, what the various sets of documents are and how they might relate, and how revelation and translation were understood at the time by Joseph and the Saints. This is important since it has been known since the extant fragments were recovered in the 1960s that they actually contain common funerary texts (see https://archive.org/stream/improvementera7101unse#page/n13/mode/2up). There are two theories that explain this discrepancy – either the scriptural text was on the much larger portion of papyri that was lost, or it was revealed without regard to what the papyri actually contain (see https://www.lds.org/topics/translation-and-historicity-of-the-book-of-abraham?la... – the introduction focuses on the latter.
There is also a brief introduction to each section, explaining what it contains and the related history, along with a physical description of the items, including measurements (this is particularly important because the photos are not to scale, although there are 2 pages that do show fragments of the Book of Breathing and the Book of the Dead in relationship with each other). At the end is a reference material section, which contains a “Book of Abraham Chronology for the Years 1835 and 184s,” “Works Cited,” and “Comparison of Characters.” This last item is a chart spanning 30 pages which “allows readers to compare the instances of a character and its associated information across all the documents in which that character appears” (page 350.) This chart is likely to be a helpful resource used in future research.
The documents are available online now, but the “Comparison of Characters,” volume introduction, and the notes are currently only available in the book. And, as always, the notes contain very helpful and interesting information. It is evident that a lot of time was spent in careful studying of the documents to produce the notes.
The first part of the book, with the Egyptian papyri, speaks of them as an Egyptologist would view and translate them today. The remainder of the book speaks of the documents produced by Joseph Smith and his associates as they saw them, and tries to make sense of what they might have been doing, as they appear to have either been “study[ing] it out in [their] mind[s]” (see D&C 9:7-8) before and during the translation, which is the approach this book takes, or trying to reverse engineer the translation after it was done (another common theory).
This volume does have a number of flaws, such as the image on page 47 being upside down, and there is already an errata page online that lists some of them. But it was quite an ambitious endeavor that many of us never expected to see in print. For anyone interested in the study of the Book of Abraham beyond the scriptural text, this volume is a must have.… (mehr)