The Sermon as Discursive Frame for the Nazi Past: Preaching about the German History Exhibition “Neue Anfänge nach 1945?”
Paver, C
Date: 16 November 2023
Article
Journal
Journal for the History of Rhetoric
Publisher
Penn State University Press
Publisher DOI
Abstract
When a history exhibition about the transition from National Socialism to democracy toured Lutheran churches in northern Germany in the 2010s, preachers were invited to address the exhibition in their Sunday sermon. Like the speeches regularly given by civic dignitaries at German history museums, the sermons drew on democratic traditions ...
When a history exhibition about the transition from National Socialism to democracy toured Lutheran churches in northern Germany in the 2010s, preachers were invited to address the exhibition in their Sunday sermon. Like the speeches regularly given by civic dignitaries at German history museums, the sermons drew on democratic traditions of speaking about National Socialism. They also drew on Lutheran discursive traditions: Bible exegesis, homiletics, theology. The article considers how preachers combine a professional knowledge of what should be said about National Socialism with their pastoral role. The German family emerges as a key – but limiting – trope in discussion of the Nazi past in the church setting.
Languages, Cultures and Visual Studies
Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences
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