Speaking to reconciliation: voices of faith addressing racial and cultural divides

Part I: Commending, framing, and explaining the work of reconciliation -- Part II: Pursuing reconciliation through apology, forgiveness, and reparation -- Conclusion: the ongoing work of reconciliation.

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:Speaking of religion
Main Author: Hatch, John B. 1962- (Author, Editor)
Format: Print Book
Language:English
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Published: New York Bern Berlin Brussels Vienna Oxford Warsaw Peter Lang [2020]
In: Speaking of religion (Vol. 2)
Series/Journal:Speaking of religion Vol. 2
Standardized Subjects / Keyword chains:B Racism / Crime against humanity / Reconciliation / Political speech / Discourse analysis
B North America / Blacks / Slavery / Indigenous peoples / Racism / Germany / Jewish persecution / Reconciliation / Rhetoric / Discourse analysis
IxTheo Classification:AD Sociology of religion; religious policy
CC Christianity and Non-Christian religion; Inter-religious relations
Further subjects:B Discourse Analysis Political aspects
B Discourse Analysis Religious aspects
B Rhetoric Political aspects
B Restorative Justice
B Rhetoric Moral and ethical aspects
B Truth commissions
B Reconciliation Political aspects
B Reconciliation Philosophy
B Crimes against humanity
Online Access: Inhaltstext (Verlag)
Table of Contents
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Description
Summary:Part I: Commending, framing, and explaining the work of reconciliation -- Part II: Pursuing reconciliation through apology, forgiveness, and reparation -- Conclusion: the ongoing work of reconciliation.
"In North America, Africa, and across the globe, many societies are deeply divided along racial, ethnic, political, or religious lines by histories of violence and oppression. Bridging such divides requires symbolic action that transcends, reframes, redeems, and repairs-working to restore both fractured relationships and a fragmented moral order. Because such efforts implicate cultures' deepest, most sacred beliefs and values, cultural leaders speaking to reconciliation often draw upon the resources and energy of religious discourse. Speaking to Reconciliation introduces this burgeoning body of faith-informed rhetoric through a selection of important and illustrative speeches. From Abraham Lincoln to Barack Obama, Martin Luther King Jr. to Desmond Tutu, Elie Wiesel to Jordan's King Abdullah II, and Thich Nhat Hanh to Ireland's President Mary McAleese (and others), readers will encounter diverse yet overlapping ways in which public figures have rhetorically appropriated their religious traditions to warrant a vision of reconciliation in society. These speech texts set forth principles of reconciliation, herald examples of its practice, address legacies of injustice, make apologies for historical wrongs, call for reparations, commend the power of forgiveness, and recommend spiritual practices conducive to reconciliation. Rhetoric scholar John B. Hatch presents a conceptual framework for doing analysis and critique of reconciliation discourse and applies this framework in introductions to the speeches, while also providing relevant historical context as well as insights from other scholars. This book offers readers a springboard for further study and, potentially, inspiration to promote justice and reconciliation in one's own sphere"--
Item Description:Includes bibliographical references
ISBN:1433162369