"Explores the socio-cultural dynamics of religious speeches through an analysis of Christian and Islamic sermons and preachers"--
This volume explores the socio-cultural dynamics of religious speeches through an analysis of Christian and Islamic sermons and preachers in the past and present.
Part I focuses on the explicit contribution of sermons in socio-cultural transformation processes. It shows how the sermons' connection to holy texts and religious norms of the specific group results in a tense relationship between preaching and the respective socio-cultural present. Part II intensifies this observation, analysing the dynamic tension between normativity and popularity. Rather than juxtaposing normative stances and popularity of sermons, it shows how that normativity can itself contribute to popularity and the quest of popularity carries its own normative stances. Part III explores the relevance of the ritual embeddedness of religious speech for the sermon as a catalyst of social dynamics and as a hybrid of normativity and popularity. It shows how speech and rituals are situated in a reciprocal relationship, where the performance of the speech, its own ritual character, and its positioning within religious practice must be individually examined.
Recenzijas
This is a splendid book that gathers essays on the meaning of preaching with regard to its ritual and social dynamics. It is one of the first volumes to bring Islamic and Christian preaching into conversation. With case studies from different time periods and continents, as well as more theoretical reflections, we are offered a very rich collection. * Andrea Bieler, Professor of Practical Theology, Basel University, Switzerland. * A strength of this volume is its focus on Christianity and Islam, two religions that value the verbal art of preaching, and thus the particular attention given to aesthetics, rhetoric, and listeners perspectives. By combining case studies with broader methodological considerations, the book pushes forward into a promising field of research. * Ines Weinrich, University of MÜnster, Germany * Juxtaposing analyses of Muslim and Christian preaching, this important volume offers a theoretically rigorous demonstration of the unique discursive powers and historical significance of the sermon genre its various social, political, religious, and linguistic dimensions. In doing so, it opens up new and productive pathways for the comparative study of religious traditions. * Charles Kendal Hirschkind, Professor of Anthropology, at the University of California, Berkeley, USA *
Papildus informācija
Explores the socio-cultural dynamics of religious speeches through an analysis of Christian and Islamic sermons and preachers.
List of Contributors
Acknowledgements
Introduction, Ruth Conrad (Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany), Roland
Hardenberg (Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany), Hanna Miethner (Humboldt
University of Berlin, Germany), Max Stille (NETZ Partnership for Development
and Justice, Wetzlar, Germany)
Part I: Preaching and Social Dynamics
1. Are 1000 Sermons Representative Enough? Political and Social Dimensions of
Sermons and Religious Speeches 18001950 in Germany and Some Methodological
Problems, Olaf Blaschke (University of Münster, Germany)
2. The Struggle for Hope Continues: The Christmas Sermons of Archbishop Thabo
Makgoba, 20092019, Cas Wepener and Marileen Steyn (Stellenbosch University,
South Africa)
3. Moral Exhortation in Islamic Discourse: Performance and Ethics in Islamic
Sermons, Abdulkader Tayob (University of Cape Town, South Africa)
Part II: Popularity and Normativity in Sermons
4. Unity, Justice and Freedom: Preached Religious Staging of Political Values
in the Public Sermons on the Day of Germany Unity (Tag Der Deutschen
Einheit), Jan Hermelink (University of Göttingen, Germany)
5. Joel Osteen's Prosperity Gospel and the Enduring Popularity of America's
Smiling Preacher, Maren Freudenberg (University of Bochum, Germany)
6. A Case on Behalf of the Routine Listener, Julian Millie (Monash
University Melbourne, Australia)
Part III: Ritual and Religious Speech
7. Words Against Death Religious Speech: Perspectives From Ritual
Ambivalences and Trends, Paul Post (University of Tilburg, the Netherlands)
8. Arabic Oration in Early Islam: Religion, Ritual, and Rhetoric, Tahera
Quitbuddin (University of Chicago, USA)
9. The Rain Rogation khutba: A Case Study of the Reciprocal Relationship
Between Islamic Ritual and Religious Speech, Linda Gale Jones (Universitat
Pompeu Fabra Barcelona, Spain)
Appendices
Index
Ruth Conrad is Professor of Practical Theology at Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany.
Roland Hardenberg is Professor of Social and Cultural Anthropology at the Goethe University Frankfurt, Germany.
Hanna Miethner is a research assistant for the Faculty of Practical Theology at Humboldt University of Berlin, Germany.
Max Stille is Executive Director of NETZ Partnership for Development and Justice, Germany.