Dialogical preaching : : Bakhtin, otherness and homiletics / / Marlene Ringgaard Lorensen.

Hauptbeschreibung""Preaching as a Carnivalesque Dialogue - between the 'Wholly Other' and 'Other-Wise' Listeners"" explores the genre of preaching in light of theories of dialogicity and carnivalization developed by Mikhail Bakhtin. The Bakhtinian approach to...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Superior document:Arbeiten zur Pastoraltheologie ; v. 74
:
Place / Publishing House:Gottingen : : Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht,, [2013]
©2014
Year of Publication:2013
Language:English
Series:Arbeiten zur Pastoraltheologie ; Bd. 74.
Physical Description:1 online resource (201 p.)
Notes:Originally presented as the author's thesis (doctoral - Copenhagen) under the title: Preaching as a carnivalesque dialogue - between the "wholly other" and "other-wise" listeners.
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Table of Contents:
  • Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Acknowledgements; Table of Contents; Body; Introduction; Theories of Practice; Dialogicity; Carnivalesque; Double Otherness; Architecture of the Book; The Achilles Heel of Bakhtinian Dialogism; Chapter 1: Practice-Theoretical Methodology; Homiletical Search for Dialogical Theories of Practice; Theology as the 'Thinking of Faith'; Practice-Theoretical Interaction between Preaching and the Bakhtinian Oeuvre; Bakhtin as 'Founder of Modern Pragmatism'; Trans-Linguistic Critique of Linguistics; Dialogical Methodology for Homiletics
  • Bakhtin's Third Way between Pragmatism and Theories of PracticeConcluding Remarks; Chapter 2: Bakhtinian Dialogism; Introduction; Homiletical Request for New Communication Theories; Critique of Communication Theories in a Homiletical Context; Bakhtinian Dialogism; A) Bakhtinian Dialogism between Dialogue Philosophies and Speech Act Theories; MartinBuber; Søren Kierkegaard; Speech Act Theories; Neo-Pragmatic Alternation between 'Prior' and 'Passing Theories' .; Linguistic Ability as 'Feel for the Game'; B) Bakhtinian Alternative to the 'Transfer Model' of Communication
  • C) 3 Levels of Dialogicity1) Language Theoretical Level: Language is Per Definition Dialogical; The Foreign Word-tjusjoje slovo; Model of the Foreign Word ; 2) Communication-Theoretical Level: Response can be More or Less Dialogical; 3) Philosophical Level: Dialogue as Truthful Existence; D) Heteroglossia, Chronotope, and Polyphony; Chronotope; Heteroglossia; Polyphony; Concluding Remarks; Chapter 3: Dialogical Preaching: From 'New Homiletics' to 'Other-wise Homiletics'; Introduction; German Shift of Paradigm toward Interactive Dialogicity; Dialogicity in Swedish Homiletical Contexts
  • Recent Danish Homiletics between Orality and LiteracyThe 'Dialogical Principle' in Fred Craddock's Homiletics; Craddock's 'Inductive Method' in Light of Kierkegaard's 'Indirect Message'; Listener-Oriented Preaching in Light of Kierkegaard's Reflections on 'The Upbuilding'; Craddock's 'Dialogical Principle' in Light of Bakhtin; Buttrick's Conversational Homiletics; Other-wise Critique of the New Homiletics; Who are the Others in 'Other-wise' Homiletics?; Listener-Oriented Preaching in Light of Bakhtinian Dialogism; Concluding Remarks; Chapter 4: Preaching as a Carnivalesque Genre; Introduction
  • The Problem of the Mixed Genre of PreachingBakhtinian Carnivalization; Preaching as a Carnivalesque Genre; Generic Characteristics of Carnivalization; Carnivalization between Bodies and Texts; Carnivalesque Bodies in Preaching; Kierkegaardian Carnivalization; God as the Superaddressee; TheWordwitha Loophole; Carnivalesque Texts Considered as Action; Practice-Theoretical Analyses of Contemporary Preaching; Concluding Remarks; Chapter 5: Novelist Approach to Carnivalesque Preaching; Carnival or Masquerade? ; Novelistic Heir of Proclamatory Genres; Implicit versus Explicit Listeners
  • Homiletic Experience with the Experience