Research Article
29 May 2017

Strains of the Enlightenment: Making Belief in American Secularism and African Difference in The Book of Mormon

Publication: Modern Drama
Volume 60, Number 3

Abstract

This article argues that the 2011 Broadway musical The Book of Mormon, best known for its parody of Mormon religious beliefs, uses what Sara Ahmed terms “affective economies” to paradoxically remake American beliefs in secular rationality. Whereas Richard Schechner posits a strict division between “make-believe” and “make-belief ” performances, The Book of Mormon demonstrates how the “make-believe” of Broadway makes beliefs and feelings in its audiences through circulations of affect. This article traces how such affects and beliefs are imbricated with national impressions about religious, racial, and sexual difference, particularly through the musical’s Mormon and black African characters. By attending to the musical’s impressions of Mormons and Africans, it deconstructs the musical’s tacit investments in American secularism and rationality through its circulation of “common sense” ideas about religious and racial others.

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Information & Authors

Information

Published In

Go to Modern Drama
Modern Drama
Volume 60Number 3Fall 2017
Pages: 364 - 386

History

Published online: 29 May 2017
Published in print: Fall 2017

Keywords:

  1. affect
  2. African performance
  3. Broadway
  4. Robert Lopez
  5. Mormonism
  6. musical theatre
  7. Trey Parker
  8. Matt Stone

Authors

Affiliations

Kellen Hoxworth
Biography: kellen hoxworth is an Andrew W. Mellon Postdoctoral Fellow at Dartmouth College, where he is affiliated with the Leslie Center for the Humanities, the Department of Theater, and the Program in African and African American Studies. His writing has been published in Performance Research and Theatre Survey.

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Modern Drama 2017 60:3, 364-386

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