![]() (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1983. ADEN ROSS, Salt Lake City, Utah A River Runs Through It. And too often, the writer indulges in jargon lost on a non-Mormon audience, like “being someone’s mouth” or “making points with a Seventy.” Nonetheless, any audience - intellectual or professional, male or female, Mormon or not - will find in these plays ideas worth investigating: the place of the individual in any church, the church in the state, and the state under God. Rogers accuses himself of “Maryolatry,” but, except for Golgotha, not only female audiences would find his women stereotyped when not downright ignored. ![]() ![]() ![]() In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:ģ50 Western American Literature ing story lines through a wide variety of subjects but his characters sometimes lack definition and individuality. ![]()
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