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8 J.L. & Fam. Stud. 363 (2006)
Turkey Is in Our Midst: Orientalism and Contagion in Nineteenth Century Anti-Mormonism

handle is hein.journals/jlfst8 and id is 373 raw text is: Turkey Is in Our Midst:
Orientalism and Contagion in
Nineteenth Century Anti-Mormonism
Christine Talbot*
When George Reynolds walked into the Supreme Court in 1878, he
carried with him the hopes of thousands of Mormons in Utah. In October 1875,
the prominent Mormon leader had been indicted for polygamy and convicted1
under the Morrill Act,2 an 1862 law prohibiting the practice of bigamy. Hoping
to test the constitutionality of anti-polygamy legislation, Mormon leaders had
pursued the Reynolds case all the way to the U.S. Supreme Court. When the
landmark Reynolds decision, handed down in 1879, upheld the constitu-
tionality of federal anti-polygamy legislation,3 Mormons across the board were
deeply disappointed. However, anti-Mormons, who for decades had marshaled
support for anti-polygamy laws, were elated.4 Over the next decade, the federal
government unleashed an unprecedented legislative and judicial campaign
against the Mormon practice of plural marriage.5 Legal campaigns against
polygamy attacked Mormon polygamic theocracy by taking aim at Mormon
citizenship rights, most notably, the rights to hold office, serve on juries and
vote.6
Legal campaigns against polygamy during the 1880s, legitimized and
given new life by the Reynolds decision, were built on a foundation of
* Professor Christine Talbot is presently an Adjunct Faculty member in the
Gender Studies Program at the University of Utah. She received Bachelor of Arts and
Bachelor of Science degrees in 1995 from the University of Utah. She also received a
Certificate of Women's Studies from the University of Michigan in 2005 and her Ph.D.
from the University of Michigan in 2006.
' Reynolds v. United States, 98 U.S. 145, 146 (1878).
2 Morrill Act, ch. 126, 12 Stat. 501 (1862).
' Id. at 168.
4 For analyses of the Reynolds case, see SARAH BARRINGER GORDON, THE
MORMON QUESTION: POLYGAMY AND CONSTITUTIONAL CONFLICT IN NINETEENTH-
CENTURY AMERICA 119-46 (2002); NANCY F. COTT, PUBLIC Vows: A HISTORY OF
MARRIAGE AND THE NATION 113-18, 129-30 (2000); EDWIN BROWN FIRMAGE &
RICHARD COLLIN MANGRUM, ZION IN THE COURTS: A LEGAL HISTORY OF THE
CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER DAY SAINTS, 1830-1900, at 151-59 (1998);
Pamela Sheingorn & Carol Weisbrod, Reynolds v. United States: Nineteenth-Century
Forms of Marriage and the Status of Women, in DOMESTIC RELATIONS AND LAW 345-
75 (Nancy F. Cott ed., 1992); and Ray Jay Davis, Plural Marriage and Religious
Freedom: The Impact of Reynolds v. United States, 15 ARIZ. L. REv. 287, 287-306
(1973).
5 See GORDON, supra note 4, at 147-220.
6 See Edmunds Act, ch. 47, §§ 5, 8, 9, 22 Stat. 30 (1882); Edmunds-Tucker Act,
ch. 397, §§ 13, 24, 24 Stat. 635 (1887).

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