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Early insular preaching : verbal artistry and method of composition

  • A close comparison of the use of language, style and method of composition of the sizable corpus of Old English and Old Irish vernacular sermons (10c and 11c) show that both cultures make use of a preaching rhetoric which is deeply indebted to oral styles of preaching and geared towards the aural reception of the spoken word. Both tend to resort to a flamboyant pastoralism and excel in elaborate verbal artistry. While received scholarship claims that the English were subject to Irish influence in this respect because of the existence Hiberno-Latin analogues, this short monograph argues that this is very unlikely. Rather both traditions are independently indebted to 7c to 9c Continental preaching styles, the evidence of which shows that there was both a plain preaching mode (the "fisherman's" mode) and an elaborate (or "Asian") one. The use of both was advocated,depending on the occasion, by St. Augustin's "De doctrina christiana." In the Insular context of vernacular preaching, the latter seems to have been functioned as a favouredA close comparison of the use of language, style and method of composition of the sizable corpus of Old English and Old Irish vernacular sermons (10c and 11c) show that both cultures make use of a preaching rhetoric which is deeply indebted to oral styles of preaching and geared towards the aural reception of the spoken word. Both tend to resort to a flamboyant pastoralism and excel in elaborate verbal artistry. While received scholarship claims that the English were subject to Irish influence in this respect because of the existence Hiberno-Latin analogues, this short monograph argues that this is very unlikely. Rather both traditions are independently indebted to 7c to 9c Continental preaching styles, the evidence of which shows that there was both a plain preaching mode (the "fisherman's" mode) and an elaborate (or "Asian") one. The use of both was advocated,depending on the occasion, by St. Augustin's "De doctrina christiana." In the Insular context of vernacular preaching, the latter seems to have been functioned as a favoured art form.zeige mehrzeige weniger

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Metadaten
Verfasserangaben:Hildegard L. C. Tristram
ISBN:3-7001-2194-6
Titel des übergeordneten Werks (Englisch):Österreichische Akademie der Wissenschaften / Keltische Kommission : Veröffentlichungen de
Verlag:Verl. der Österr. Akad. der Wiss
Verlagsort:Wien
Publikationstyp:Monographie/Sammelband
Sprache:Englisch
Jahr der Erstveröffentlichung:1995
Erscheinungsjahr:1995
Datum der Freischaltung:25.03.2017
Band:11
Organisationseinheiten:Philosophische Fakultät / Institut für Anglistik und Amerikanistik
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