The Subjectivity of Effective History and the Suppressed Husserlian Elements in Gadamer’s Hermeneutics

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2010 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sinéad Murphy
Keyword(s):  

2018 ◽  
Vol 13 (02) ◽  
pp. 260-278
Author(s):  
Muhammad Saifullah

This essay is going to depict how Imam Nawawi’s construction upon courtesy in deal with something containing Qur’an verses within al-Tibya>n. Imam Nawawi had brought out particular issue in which foregoing works such al-Muhazz^ab and Niha>yat al-Mat}lab did not issue. For instance, regarding the case in 11 century Imam Shirazi did not point out anything not to touch when one is in h}adas^ (ritual impurity) except fikih, whereas a century after Imam Juwaini issued a book of h}awa>sy and ust}u>rah, and subsequently in 13 Imam Nawawi come with new additional outlook of book which muh}dis^ (one who has h}adas^) could not touch: tafsi>r and h}adis^. By borrowing Klaus Krippendor’s content analysis and a pattern of transmission-transformation, the essay interests to investigate why a shift-mentioned is able to come up, how can it be happened, and in what extent it had been transmitted. The article therefore argues that the shift within modesty of treating Qur’an verses is triggered by a couple things: context differences surround each Imam and their peculiarly effective history—to use Gadamer’s phrase. Afterward, concerning form, though an appropriation is intensively occurring, a static point can be constantly found which is always approached to be maintained.


Author(s):  
Mithilesh Kumar Jha

This chapter examines the ways through which Christian missionaries and British officials attempted to classify Indian languages. How these exercises turned out to be the basis for different groups in India to forge various identities? How that led to competing claims and counter claims by various communities and groups? In particular, language turns out to be a powerful marker of group identity. The question of ‘chaste’ versus ‘standard’, written versus oral, and language with or without grammar and literature became politically and emotionally charged issue since the beginning of the nineteenth century. It also led to the politics of linguistic dominations and subordinations as well as resistances to such processes. For the British, it was an arduous task to classify and categorize various languages and knowledge systems of ‘natives’ in India into one single hegemonic narrative. They did not follow a consistent linguistic policy which remains a daunting task for the post Independent governments in India as well. And, we continue to witness various forms of identity movements based on language, religion and caste with varying degree of intensities. In these movements, their numerical strength became one of the most important signifier. Their engagement with modernity and their own ‘pre-modern’ selves are also important conjuncture in such mobilizations. I have argued in this chapter that more serious explorations of these movements will enrich not only the effective history and politics of modern India but also the understanding of unfolding and adaptations to modernity in India.


2012 ◽  
Vol 21 (1) ◽  
pp. 87-112
Author(s):  
Melissa L. Archer

History of effect is a recent methodology being used as a means to discover the ways in which readers are influenced by biblical texts. This essay seeks to discover how the early Pentecostals were influenced in their worship by their reading of the Apocalypse. Early Pentecostal literature is filled with references to the worship practices and experiences of the early Pentecostal communities. The literature, which is largely testimonial in nature, indicates that the early Pentecostals were deeply influenced in their worship by the Apocalypse. This essay provides a survey of both Wesleyan-Pentecostal and Finished Work periodical literature from 1906-1916.


2019 ◽  
Vol 26 (5) ◽  
pp. 527-537 ◽  
Author(s):  
Melissa Freeman

Process ontologies focus on the constitutive activity of becoming-other and describe the movement of hermeneutic understanding as it performs its mode of being anew. Inherent to this process is the work of effective-history, which denotes our condition as historical beings and the effects history has on our being, doing, and understanding. In this article, I argue that philosophical hermeneutics provides a mode of participation that supports qualitative researchers committed to entering this flux and reimagining new methodological possibilities for research. Philosophical hermeneutics conceptualized as jazz improvisation perturbs preconceived notions of tradition, dialogue, anticipation, and time to support this critical role.


2004 ◽  
Vol 34 (1) ◽  
pp. 121-136 ◽  
Author(s):  
Hans-Helmuth Gander

This essay seeks to examine the relation between selfhood and history through Gadamer's conception of hermeneutical experience, one of the cornerstones of his theory of effective history in Truth and Method . By setting Gadamer's project into relation with those of Heidegger and Hegel, my primary focus is to demonstrate how effective history, in its emphasis upon the finite, the partial, and the fragmented, actually turns these seeming deficiencies into advantages for human self-understanding in the current theoretical climate of plurality and diversity. I argue that the dialectical model of the relationship between self and tradition given by Gadamer serves to reveal our human limitations, and thereby allows us a space in which self-determination can be carried out through an effective-historical consciousness that avoids the pitfalls of subject-centered, all-encompassing, unified theories of history, on the one hand, and scientifically unselfconscious, ahistorical approaches to selfhood, on the other. The essay closes with an application of effective-historical consciousness to the tradition of post-holocaust German theater, where hermeneutical experience functions to provide resources for Jewish self-determination through the same tradition that had formerly excluded them.


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