The Quest for Charisma: Christianity and Persuasion

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Bloomsbury Academic, 2000 M03 30 - 211 páginas

Smith examines the major canons of classical rhetorical theory by demonstrating their influence on Christian speakers. He begins by explaining why charisma has become a misused term. He then explores why writing about charisma has been so difficult in terms of the academic prejudice in favor of objectivity and reason. He then constructs a three- level definition of charisma to replace the current one.

After analyzing the charisma of Jesus in terms of the three personae he developed as teacher, human, and messiah, Smith argues that his power arose from this rich development of character. The textual charisma of the Gospel narrators is explored in terms of their narrative techniques, and Smith then examines the concept of ethos, the use of emotion in persuasion, and explicates the theories of leading existential thinkers to develop advanced notions of human responsibility and transcendent spirituality. These two notions are used to refine and improve previous definitions of charisma. Smith then establishes a matrix that crosses levels of charisma with different types of identification. This work will be of particular interest to scholars, students, and researchers involved with Christianity, philosophy, and persuasion.

Acerca del autor (2000)

CRAIG R. SMITH, MD has served as the Chairman of the Department of Surgery at Columbia University and the New York Presbyterian Hospital for ten years. In March of 2020, when New York City became the world’s COVID-19 epicenter, Craig started writing daily COVID email updates to his colleagues. The emails went viral, leading The Wall Street Journal to dub Smith “The Pandemic’s Most Powerful Writer.” He lives in New York City with his wife and has three grown daughters.

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