ImageVerifierCode 换一换
格式:PDF , 页数:7 ,大小:48.90KB ,
资源ID:5970782      下载积分:10 金币
快捷下载
登录下载
邮箱/手机:
温馨提示:
快捷下载时,用户名和密码都是您填写的邮箱或者手机号,方便查询和重复下载(系统自动生成)。 如填写123,账号就是123,密码也是123。
特别说明:
请自助下载,系统不会自动发送文件的哦; 如果您已付费,想二次下载,请登录后访问:我的下载记录
支付方式: 支付宝    微信支付   
验证码:   换一换

加入VIP,免费下载
 

温馨提示:由于个人手机设置不同,如果发现不能下载,请复制以下地址【https://www.docduoduo.com/d-5970782.html】到电脑端继续下载(重复下载不扣费)。

已注册用户请登录:
账号:
密码:
验证码:   换一换
  忘记密码?
三方登录: 微信登录   QQ登录   微博登录 

下载须知

1: 本站所有资源如无特殊说明,都需要本地电脑安装OFFICE2007和PDF阅读器。
2: 试题试卷类文档,如果标题没有明确说明有答案则都视为没有答案,请知晓。
3: 文件的所有权益归上传用户所有。
4. 未经权益所有人同意不得将文件中的内容挪作商业或盈利用途。
5. 本站仅提供交流平台,并不能对任何下载内容负责。
6. 下载文件中如有侵权或不适当内容,请与我们联系,我们立即纠正。
7. 本站不保证下载资源的准确性、安全性和完整性, 同时也不承担用户因使用这些下载资源对自己和他人造成任何形式的伤害或损失。

版权提示 | 免责声明

本文(Mormon Oratory - Gideon Burton.pdf)为本站会员(HR专家)主动上传,道客多多仅提供信息存储空间,仅对用户上传内容的表现方式做保护处理,对上载内容本身不做任何修改或编辑。 若此文所含内容侵犯了您的版权或隐私,请立即通知道客多多(发送邮件至docduoduo@163.com或直接QQ联系客服),我们立即给予删除!

Mormon Oratory - Gideon Burton.pdf

1、Mormon OratoryAn IntroductionGideon O. Burton / Brigham Young University“And now, as the preaching of the word had a great tendency to lead the people to do thatwhich was justyea, it had had more powerful effect upon the minds of the people than thesword, or anything else, which had happened unto th

2、emtherefore Alma thought it wasexpedient that they should try the virtue of the word of God.” Alma 31:5Mormons do not generally think of themselves as orators. By and large Latter-day Saintsconsider themselves to be regular folks, while orators are great statesmen and public figures likeAbraham Linc

3、oln, Winston Churchill, or Martin Luther King, Jr. Oratory connotes a certain levelof high-toned rhetoric that may even feel fundamentally foreign to LDS sensibilities. Politicalrhetoric, after all, is tainted with bombast and deceit. Mormons do, however, consider themselvesto be speakers. We give “

4、talks,” but we dont declaim; we may teach, but we dont harangue; wemay proselyte, but we dont propagandize.But Mormons nevertheless participate in a long tradition of Christian oratory that can be saidto begin with Jesus himself. Christs sermons and teachings have flooded the world with “the word,”t

5、he message of salvation, and that message about the Mediator is mediated through language,through discourse, through speaking and teaching, preaching and praying, blessing and confessing,chastising and consoling, and every act of Christian service that depends upon speech. Heavenlycommunion requires

6、 earthly communication.Latter-day Saints, as those of so many other faiths, make the study of the spoken word aprominent part of their private and public devotion. We turn to written sermons for both doctrine andencouragement: the Sermon on the Mount, Peters Pentecostal sermon, Pauls Mars Hill speec

7、h tothe Athenians, and in the Book of Mormon the stirring speeches by King Benjamin, Abinadi,Burton / Mormon Oratory / p.2Amulek, Samuel the Lamanite, Alma, or Christ addressing the ancient Americans. As Christians andas Mormons we preserve and prize the spoken word. We reread it and quote it and sh

8、ape ourthoughts into the framework of the spoken words of ancient and modern prophets. For Latter-daySaints, living within a theology that insists upon the reality of ongoing revelation, the written wordin scripture becomes continuous with the spoken word heard from the mouths of contemporaryprophet

9、s and local leaders who speak Gods present will; patriarchs and priesthood holders whopronounce blessings; missionaries who preach and teachers who teach. In short, Mormons believeGod continues speaking, presently and powerfully, and this conditions Latter-day Saints to attendto and to expect vital

10、spiritual guidance through Gods written and spoken word, past and present.Scripture is living for Mormons; the echoes of Gods spoken word never diminish, but are onlycomplemented and amplified through the vigorous voicing given them by believers in a hundredspeaking contexts.Oratory is not just a su

11、bject of study for Latter-day Saints; it is an ongoing practice. Ours isa lay church in which members of the congregation take turns at the pulpit preaching, and in theclassroom teaching, and on the streets testifying. Public speaking has always been central to theMormon faith. The proselyting that

12、helped Joseph Smiths fledgling church emerge from thebackdrop of nineteenth century America was accomplished through preaching, and the millions ofadherents who have for nearly 200 years grounded their faith in the restored gospel of Jesus Christhave shared and shored up their faith through constant

13、 communication. Consider the fact that everyweek of the year some 20,000 sermons are given across the pulpits of Latter-day Saint wards andbranches. To this can be added the speeches given at every fireside, funeral, or patriotic assemblyin which Mormons regularly gather. For Latter-day Saints as fo

14、r other faiths, it is not sufficient toBurton / Mormon Oratory / p.3receive the word; it must be shared and celebrated in many different places to many differentaudiences through formal and informal speaking.Most Mormon speaking goes unrecorded, but the official speeches of church leaders havebeen p

15、reserved and published from the beginning, and those sermons now constitute an impressiveliterary and oratorical heritage. I estimate that some 8000 sermons presented at the semiannualGeneral Conferences of the church have been published and circulated, and dozens more are addedto this twice a year.

16、 The Journal of Discourses fills a shelf with 26 volumes of collected sermons,some 1424 individual speeches in all, and these span but a few decades of Mormon history. GeneralConference addresses are now published in multiple media on an ongoing basis, accumulating a vaststore of recorded public spe

17、aking. It is not just those speeches given at general conferences of thechurch that are published. A sizeable body of published speeches now exists from the variousdevotional addresses, forum speeches, and commencement speeches that have taken place at LDSinstitutions of higher learning, while other

18、 popular occasions for Mormon public speaking have inrecent years also become a steady tributary in the swelling river of Latter-day Saint public address:Womens Conference, Especially For Youth, religious symposia, academic conferences, etc.Mormon speeches have also circulated widely over the broadc

19、ast media (radio, television, internet),in audiotape, videotape, and DVD versions, and fireside circuit speakers have published their talksin book form or marketed these extensively through LDS retailers on audiotape and CD. Many Mormon speakers have received popular acclaim for their oratorical abi

20、lities (SidneyRigdon, Brigham Young, Matthew Cowley, LeGrand Richards, Neal A. Maxwell, John Bytheway,Susan Easton Black, Chieko Okazaki, Sheri Dew, etc.), but surprisingly few have been given seriousscholarly attention or rhetorical criticism. David Whittakers bibliography counts only a score ofBur

21、ton / Mormon Oratory / p.4formal studies of some 15 Mormonsall of them general authorities, none of them women, most ofthem from the nineteenth century. There is more that remains undone than done in analyzingMormon oratory.As a starting place for understanding the range of Mormon speaking, we might

22、 consider someof the major categories by which experts in rhetoric and public speaking analyze communication andapply these within a Mormon context. Most of these, by the way, have had next to no seriousattention yet given to them:To whom do Mormons speak? with what purposes? in what settings and on

23、 what occasions?What is characteristic of Mormon speaking as children, as adolescents, as adults, as teachers, asleaders?What determines the formality of Mormon speaking? Is Mormon speaking prepared orspontaneous, pre-written or extemporaneous? How do Mormons develop their speaking ability? What are

24、 measures of the success of Mormon speaking? What cultural habits have developed that now typify Mormon public address, and are thesecontinuous across the many places and time periods in which Mormons have lived and spoken?What standard patterns can be found in Mormon speaking? what lines of reasoni

25、ng, whatkinds of authority are appealed to? Are there typical patterns of arrangement within Mormonsermons?How do Mormons establish their authority when speaking?How do Mormons appeal to emotion within their speaking? What use is there of humor, ofBurton / Mormon Oratory / p.5personal anecdotes, of

26、emotionally bearing witness of belief? How does this relate to the messageand purpose of their speaking?What stylistic traits are sought for, avoided, or imitated within Mormon speaking? What methods are used for delivery in Mormon speaking? How do Latter-day Saints useinflection, pitch, gestures, v

27、isual objects, and media as part of their speaking? How do they makeuse of sound amplification? How do they accommodate the broadcasting of speeches, the translationof speeches?When are speeches recorded? transcribed? distributed? read in written form? How dospeeches incorporate material from other

28、speeches, or how do speakers draw from scripture, fromhistory, from contemporary culture to make their points?What does Mormon speaking actually do? What effects does it have? How does this squarewith the intentions of speakers and leaders? Lets take just the first of this series of questions to see

29、 how it plays out: To whom doMormons speak? On the most general level Mormon speaking can be divided betweencommunication oriented toward those outside the faith (proselyting) and toward those inside the faith(sermons to the converted). A third vital audience is God as He is spoken to through prayer

30、. Ofcourse one could further divide the Mormon audience into the various settings in which speakingis employed very differently: the General Conference setting, speaking from the podium of aMormon chapel, speaking in a classroom setting, communication within private interviews betweenleaders and mem

31、bers or between parents and children, speaking that takes place in home and visitingteaching settings, etc. Much could be studied about how Mormon speaking changes when theseBurton / Mormon Oratory / p.6different audiences or settings are anticipated, especially when one adds the complicating factor

32、 ofaudience size, mixed audiences (old/young, male/female, member/non-member, active/less-activemember, Americans/non-Americans, etc.), intimate speaking settings vs. mass audience settings, andof course the way that media, either by its presence or absence, affects a speakers understanding ofhis/he

33、r audience and the way he/she shapes, times, arranges, and presents his/her speech. Thequestion of audience very quickly moves to the question of setting, and the places and occasions forMormon speaking each have their own dynamic. Ultimately, studying Mormon speaking requiresthe sensitivity of an a

34、nthropologist in addition to the skills of a linguist, literary critic, or rhetorician.It sometimes requires the historians knowledge of places in the past or the sociologistsunderstanding of the cultural configurations that conditioned Mormon speaking in places as diverseas ancient America, 19 cent

35、ury New York, 20 century western American, or the 21 centuryth th stinternational settings for LDS speaking. Obviously there are a variety of fruitful possibilities for investigating Mormon speaking,beginning with an understanding of the various people, places, and events involved with LDS publicadd

36、ress. My students and I have put together a proposed table of contents for a possible anthologyof Mormon speaking. Its categories are a beginning for understanding the great variety of audiencesand occasions for Mormon speaking that have not yet been academically studied (see separatedocument).Mormo

37、n oratory is complementary with Mormon literature and history. Obviously asspeeches are recorded, printed, distributed, and read they become literary objects with their owndynamicsnew audiences, applied to new uses, and overall helping to contribute to a body of writingthat makes possible analysis a

38、nd interpretation unavailable when a speech is never written. TheseBurton / Mormon Oratory / p.7recorded speeches, like the thousands of poems, stories, plays, and novels penned by Mormons,contribute to a cultural record through which we can come to understand the values and characterof the LDS peop

39、le throughout their varied history. Of course some speeches become canonized asscripture, whether anciently (Book of Mormon speeches), currently (General Conference addressespublished officially as Gods word through modern day prophets), or privately (patriarchalblessings). Those who compose their speeches in written form also develop a personal literature, arecord not just of their speaking but of their thinking processes and their personality. #Draft: September 15, 2005

本站链接:文库   一言   我酷   合作


客服QQ:2549714901微博号:道客多多官方知乎号:道客多多

经营许可证编号: 粤ICP备2021046453号世界地图

道客多多©版权所有2020-2025营业执照举报