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The Questions We Should Be Asking
How Can We Judge Personal History with Fairness and Charity? Featuring Jenny Pulsipher

What does it mean to be an objective judge of history — of personal history, family history, or shared human history? Are charity and objectivity opposites — or are they partners? Today on the podcast I talk to Jenny Hale Pulsipher, a professor of history at BYU and a contributor to the Maxwell Institute’s recent book Every Needful Thing: Essays on the Life of the Mind and the Heart. As an historian, Jenny specializes in finding the nuance in complex historical figures —never excusing wrongdoing, but never losing sight of the gospel’s witness that we are all children of God. 

 

In the October 2022 General Conference, Sister Anette Dennis, Counselor in the Relief Society General Presidency, asked, “How many wounded individuals do we have among us? How often do we judge others based on their outward appearance and actions, or lack of action, when, if we fully understood, we would instead react with compassion and a desire to help instead of adding to their burdens with our judgment?”

 

Jenny and I talked about how to balance objectivity and charity by adding, not subtracting, individual perspectives; and about how open-eyed interaction with our families and our histories can strengthen, not weaken, our bonds of love. We talked about the ways that the histories we tell might unknowingly burden the wounded. Jenny shared an amazing story about her own family history, and she talked about how her youthful testimony of the Book of Mormon grew through a challenge that forced her to revisit the questions she brought to it. 

 

Thanks for joining us today, and I hope you enjoy this conversation with Jenny Pulsipher. 

Meet Podcast Guest
Jenny Pulsipher
Jenny Hale Pulsipher is a professor of history at Brigham Young University, specializing in early American and Native American history. She received her PhD in American History from Brandeis University in 1999 and began teaching at BYU in the fall of 1998.

Her first book, “Subjects unto the Same King": Indians, English, and the Contest for Authority in Colonial New England, was published by the University of Pennsylvania Press in 2005 and was selected as a Choice Magazine Outstanding Academic Title in 2006.

Her second book, Swindler Sachem: The American Indian who Sold His Birthright, Dropped Out of Harvard, and Conned the King of England (Yale University Press, 2018), received the 2019 Norris and Carole Hundley award for the best book on any historical subject from the American Historical Association-Pacific Coast Branch.

Her next book project, Shadow Sacagawea: A Family History of Race and Religion in the American West, will examine the life experiences of her fourth-great grandmother, Sally Exervier Ward, a Shoshone Indian woman who married first a French-Canadian and then an American fur trader, bore four mixed-race children, and was baptized into the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, thus beginning a family history in which Anglo-European, Native, and LDS cultures, with their respective approaches to race and religion, combined, clashed, and shaped the choices and identities of her descendants.

Dr. Pulsipher has also published articles in the William and Mary Quarterly, Early American Literature, The New England Quarterly, and The Massachusetts Historical Review.
References

Jenny Hale Pulsipher, “A Tale of Two Toms: On the Uses and Abuses of History.” Commonplace: The Journal of Early American Life. http://commonplace.online/article/a-tale-of-two-toms/

 

Jenny Hale Pulsipher, “Warts and All.” Every Needful Thing: Essays on the Life of the Mind and the Heart, eds. Melissa Wei-Tsing Inouye and Kate Holbrook. Maxwell Institute and Deseret book, 2023. https://mi.byu.edu/every-needful-thing-available-now/

 

Anette Dennis, “His Yoke Is Easy and His Burden Is Light,” October 2022. https://www.churchofjesuschrist.org/study/general-conference/2022/10/42dennis?lang=eng

 

“The Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship both gathers and nurtures disciple-scholars. As a research community, the Institute supports scholars whose work inspires and fortifies Latter-day Saints in their testimonies of the restored gospel of Jesus Christ and engages the world of religious ideas.”

The opinions and views expressed on the podcast do not reflect the views or opinions of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints, Brigham Young University, or the Neal A. Maxwell Institute for Religious Scholarship.

Any questions about the podcast can be directed to mi@byu.edu
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