網站導覽關於本館諮詢委員會聯絡我們書目提供版權聲明引用本站捐款贊助回首頁
書目佛學著者站內
檢索系統全文專區數位佛典語言教學相關連結
 


加值服務
書目管理
書目匯出
Buddhist Public Advocacy and Activism in Thailand: Justifying Engagement and a Rhetoric of Humanization Through Identification
作者 Pinkerton, Craig M (著)
出版日期2018.01
頁次333
出版者Ohio University
出版者網址 https://www.ohio.edu/
出版地Ohio, US [俄亥俄州, 美國]
資料類型博碩士論文=Thesis and Dissertation
使用語言英文=English
學位類別博士
校院名稱Ohio University
系所名稱Communication Studies
指導教授Raymie McKerrow
關鍵詞rhetoric; advocacy; activism; humanization; dehumanization; identification; Burke; Thailand; engaged Buddhism
摘要Public advocacy and activism play an important role in shaping public culture and civil society. In modern Thailand and historical Siam, Buddhism has been a key factor in the social change processes shaping modern civil society, and rhetoric has been a key factor shaping this sphere of public life. This study examined two problems: (1) how contemporary Thai Buddhists justify their advocacy and activism in rhetorical practice--efforts that are under the duress of justification because of the expectation for monastics in particular to operate apolitically and the widespread false assumption that Buddhists are not concerned with social problems or public issues--and (2) how Thai Buddhists use rhetorical practice to influence the way we understand the issues they work on. To examine these problems, I used a combination of inductive approaches to rhetorical criticism and grounded theory methodology. I interviewed nineteen Theravada Buddhists and considered twelve various written but mostly spoken public statements made by the participants in the study. While I identified twenty sources of justification for engaging in social change efforts, I found participants’ use of five of these rationales were particularly salient: (a) suffering (dukkha), (b) interdependence (paticcasamuppada), (c) loving-kindness (metta) / compassion (karuna), (d) duty / obligation, and (e) a text from the Mahavagga (1.11.1). Of the five, duty / obligation was the unifying theme of the other four in that each of the other four warranted a duty / obligation. I found that these five sources of justification operated rhetorically in one of three ways or in some combination of the three ways: (a) by producing identification with others, (b) by situating the social actors morally and ethically, or (c) by providing a credible basis from which to perform social action. In terms of the second research problem, I found a number of themes, but for practicality, in this project, I examined only one closely, namely what rhetorical practices Thai Buddhists use to dignify / humanize or degrade / dehumanize subjects of their discourse in their efforts to resist or promote social change. I found six rhetorical practices that participants used to dignify / humanize: (a) stressing similarities, (b) using dukkha (suffering) as a humanizing rhetorical frame, (c) employing humanizing and dignifying tropes, (d) impersonalizing the “enemy,” (e) seeing wrongdoing through the lens of Buddha-nature, and (f) deploying the juxtaposition of contrasting images as a dignifying rhetorical scheme. I found one rhetorical practice that participants used to degrade / dehumanize: animal metaphors. I conclude with a discussion of a rhetoric of duties in contrast with a rhetoric of rights, identification and rhetorical ethics, and the implications of humanizing and dehumanizing rhetoric for civil society and conflict communication.
點閱次數297
建檔日期2023.03.08
更新日期2023.03.08










建議您使用 Chrome, Firefox, Safari(Mac) 瀏覽器能獲得較好的檢索效果,IE不支援本檢索系統。

提示訊息

您即將離開本網站,連結到,此資料庫或電子期刊所提供之全文資源,當遇有網域限制或需付費下載情形時,將可能無法呈現。

修正書目錯誤

請直接於下方表格內刪改修正,填寫完正確資訊後,點擊下方送出鍵即可。
(您的指正將交管理者處理並儘快更正)

序號
666366

查詢歷史
檢索欄位代碼說明
檢索策略瀏覽