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・ Mountain Rhythm
・ Mountain Rhythm (1943 film)
・ Mountain Mary
・ Mountain masked apalis
・ Mountain Masochist Trail Run
・ Mountain Maternal Health League
・ Mountain Mayhem
・ Mountain Meadow Farm
・ Mountain Meadow Preserve
・ Mountain Meadow Ranch
・ Mountain Meadows
・ Mountain Meadows (album)
・ Mountain Meadows massacre
・ Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon public relations
・ Mountain Meadows massacre and Mormon theology
Mountain Meadows massacre and the media
・ Mountain Meadows Reservoir
・ Mountain Meadows, Colorado
・ Mountain Men (TV series)
・ Mountain Mesa, California
・ Mountain Metropolitan Transit
・ Mountain Metropolitan Transit/Routes
・ Mountain Mike's Pizza
・ Mountain Mile
・ Mountain Mills, Alabama
・ Mountain Mission, West Virginia
・ Mountain mist frog
・ Mountain Moonlight
・ Mountain mosaic-tailed rat
・ Mountain mouse-warbler


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Mountain Meadows massacre and the media : ウィキペディア英語版
Mountain Meadows massacre and the media
Although the Mountain Meadows massacre was covered to some extent in the media during the 1850s, its first period of intense nationwide publicity began around 1872. This was after investigators obtained the confession of Philip Klingensmith, a Mormon bishop at the time of the massacre and a private in the Utah militia. National newspapers also covered the John D. Lee trials closely from 1874 to 1876, and his execution in 1877 was widely publicized. The first detailed work using modern historical methods was published in 1950, and the massacre has been the subject of several historical works since that time.
In historical fiction, the massacre inspired a genre of frontier crime fiction in the 19th century. The massacre has been portrayed in several plays, and in a 2007 motion picture, ''September Dawn''. The Massacre has also been of subject of several film documentaries including, ''Burying the Past: Legacy of the Mountain Meadows Massacre'' (2004) and ''The Mountain Meadows Massacre'' (2001).
==Early Depictions==

One of the earliest depictions of the massacre was written by a massacre participant, John D. Lee, and was entitled ''Mormonism Unveiled; or the Life and Confessions of the Late Mormon Bishop, John D. Lee'' . This ''Confession'' was published in 1877, and expressed Lee's opinion that George A. Smith was sent to southern Utah by Brigham Young to direct the massacre.〔
In 1872, Mark Twain commented on the massacre through the lens of contemporary American public opinion in an appendix〔(''Appendix B'' )〕 to his semi-autobiographical travel book ''Roughing It''.
In 1910, the massacre was the subject of a short book by Josiah F. Gibbs, who also attributed responsibility for the massacre to Brigham Young and George A. Smith.〔.〕
The trial of John D. Lee, which was highly publicized at the time, put an idea of an out-of-control theocracy into the public imagination. And, beginning in the late nineteenth century, the tragedy found place in a whole genre of historical treatments, novels—even two silent films. While the historical works among these critiqued (often in polemic fashion) early Utah's religious teachings and rhetoric, a caricature drawn from out of their criticisms came to find its place, in stereotype form, in popular fiction and entertainment.

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