2000  AML Award: Criticism

Presented to:
Benson Parkinson

For:


The first award established by the Association for Mormon Letters in 1978 was in the category of criticism, and no activity can be considered more central to the mission and vision of this body than enabling meaningful conversations. As Wayne Booth has said, Mormonism "will never attain a great artistic culture until we have achieved a great critical culture." That critical culture is indeed developing, and it has grown exponentially in recent years due to the pioneering vision and indefatigable efforts of Benson Parkinson.

Back in 1995, before e-mail became so widely used, Benson foresaw the utility of establishing an online conversation about Mormon letters and in May of that year inaugurated AML-List. Since that time, hundreds and hundreds of scholars, students, church members, and the casually interested from all over the world have become part of an online community dedicated to analyzing the aesthetic, cultural, pragmatic, and spiritual aspects of Mormon-related literature. The membership of the Association for Mormon Letters has swelled as a direct consequence of AML-List, and our meetings now reflect the influx of many younger writers and critics and the broader variety of literary genres represented by AML-List subscribers. For all but two or three days of the year when our live events take the foreground, AML-List is the Association for Mormon Letters. It has become a clearinghouse for news about LDS literature, a resource for budding writers, a forum for literary experts and lay readers, and a vehicle for announcing and promoting readings, book signings, conferences, and online resources of interest to AML members.

The guiding force behind the list has been Benson Parkinson. As moderator of the list until last year, Benson not only solved many technical problems, especially before e-mail became more established, but he also read every post to the list-literally thousands-to screen out both digressions and diatribes, continually reminding the participants of the goals and texts central to this body. AML-List could have had a shorter and less meaningful life if it had not been overseen by a well-read, good-natured, and articulate critic who knew how to tame this novel medium and turn it to account.

Benson established regular columns, including outlets for news, bibliographies, new creative writing, and especially reviews. To date, some 400 reviews have appeared on AML-List, most of which were made possible through the mediation and editing of Benson Parkinson. The AML's literary quarterly, Irreantum, was born out of the vision and the community of personnel Benson Parkinson has fashioned over the last five years. As Robert Hogge adumbrated in his recent AML presidential address, the Association for Mormon Letters has been reborn electronically, and Benson Parkinson has been the midwife to that great renewal.