In the summer of 2025, the Latter-day Saint Theology Seminar, with support from the Neal A. Maxwell Institute at Brigham Young University, the Arrington Chair of Mormon History and Culture at Utah State University, and the Mormon Studies program at Claremont Graduate University, will sponsor a summer seminar for graduate students and faculty devoted to reading Moroni 7.
The seminar will be hosted by John Durham Peters at Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, from June 8 through June 20. Travel arrangements, housing, and a per diem will be provided for admitted participants. The seminar will be led by Adam Miller and Joseph Spencer, directors of the Latter-day Saint Theology Seminar, together with Kimberly Matheson.
This tenth annual summer seminar will again adopt the Latter-day Saint Theology Seminar’s practice of facilitating intense, exploratory, interdisciplinary, and collaborative readings of Latter-day Saint scripture in a live two-week format. During the first week, the seminar will meet daily to work word by word through the text of Moroni 7:2-21 from a variety of disciplinary perspectives (philosophical, historical, literary, anthropological, rhetorical, political, archeological, sociological, etc.) in order to promote theologically rich readings of the text. The second week will workshop conference papers based on the previous week’s collaboration and will culminate in a one-day conference, open to the public, on June 20, 2025. The conference proceedings will then be gathered and edited for publication.
The seminar welcomes applications from a wide variety of academic disciplines, cultural backgrounds, and geographic locations. Graduate students, junior faculty, and scholars based outside the U.S. are especially encouraged to apply, though applications from senior and independent scholars are also welcome. Moreover, the seminar is strongly committed to gender parity in the seminar’s composition.
Applications should be submitted by January 15, 2025. Notifications will be sent by February 1, 2025. Application materials should include (1) a full curriculum vitae, (2) a 200 word statement regarding the applicant’s interest in the seminar, and (3) a 500-750 word essay that demonstrates the applicant’s ability to offer a close, creative, and theologically substantial reading of Moroni 7:10.
Questions and application materials should be directed to Maxwell_Institute@byu.edu
For more information about the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship, visit: www.mi.byu.edu
For more information about the Latter-day Saint Theology Seminar, visit: www.ldstheologyseminar.org