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  • Title: Zu Hermeneutik, Literaturkritik und Sprachtheorie / On Hermeneutics, Theory of Literature and Language

    Zu Hermeneutik, Literaturkritik und Sprachtheorie / On Hermeneutics, Theory of Literature and Language

    Gesammelte Vorträge, Beiträge und Essays / Collected Essays, Lectures and Papers
    by Kurt Mueller-Vollmer (Author) 2019
    ©2018 Monographs
  • Title: Conducting Hermeneutic Research

    Conducting Hermeneutic Research

    From Philosophy to Practice
    by Nancy J. Moules (Author) Graham McCaffrey (Author) James C. Field (Author) Catherine M. Laing (Author) 2015
    ©2015 Textbook
  • Title: The Hermeneutics of Translation

    The Hermeneutics of Translation

    A Translator’s Competence and the Philosophy of Hans-Georg Gadamer
    by Beata Piecychna (Author) 2021
    ©2021 Monographs
  • Title: Introducing Ordinary African Readers’ Hermeneutics

    Introducing Ordinary African Readers’ Hermeneutics

    A Case Study of the Agĩkũyũ Encounter with the Bible
    by Johnson Kinyua (Author) 2011
    ©2011 Monographs
  • Title: Exegesis and Hermeneutics in the Churches of the East

    Exegesis and Hermeneutics in the Churches of the East

    Select Papers from the SBL Meeting in San Diego, 2007
    by Vahan Hovhanessian (Volume editor)
    ©2009 Monographs
  • Title: The Aesthetic Hermeneutics of Hans-Georg Gadamer and Hans Urs von Balthasar

    The Aesthetic Hermeneutics of Hans-Georg Gadamer and Hans Urs von Balthasar

    by Jason Paul Bourgeois (Author)
    ©2007 Monographs
  • Title: A Hermeneutic on Dislocation as Experience

    A Hermeneutic on Dislocation as Experience

    Creating a Borderland, Constructing a Hybrid Identity
    by Hemchand Gossai (Author) Jung Eun Sophia Park (Author) 2011
    ©2012 Monographs
  • Title: Hermeneutics and the Psychoanalysis of Religion

    Hermeneutics and the Psychoanalysis of Religion

    by Stephen Costello (Author)
    ©2010 Monographs
  • Title: Temporal Oppositions as Hermeneutical Categories in the Epistle to the Hebrews
  • Title: Hermeneutic Research

    Hermeneutic Research

    An Experiential Method
    by Sunnie D. Kidd (Volume editor) Jim Kidd (Volume editor) Omar S. Alattas (Volume editor) 2019
    ©2019 Monographs
  • Title: Introduction to Philosophical Hermeneutics

    Introduction to Philosophical Hermeneutics

    by Ladislav Tkáčik (Author) 2016
    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: Ecological Pedagogy, Buddhist Pedagogy, Hermeneutic Pedagogy

    Ecological Pedagogy, Buddhist Pedagogy, Hermeneutic Pedagogy

    Experiments in a Curriculum for Miracles
    by Jackie Seidel (Author) David W. Jardine (Author) 2013
    ©2014 Textbook
  • Title: An Anglican Hermeneutic of the Transfiguration

    An Anglican Hermeneutic of the Transfiguration

    by Benjamin Thomas (Author) 2013
    ©2013 Monographs
  • Title: On Beauty and Being: Hans-Georg Gadamer’s and Virginia Woolf’s Hermeneutics of the Beautiful
  • Title: Hermeneutics of Evil in the Works of Endō Shūsaku

    Hermeneutics of Evil in the Works of Endō Shūsaku

    Between Reading and Writing
    by Justyna Weronika Kasza (Author) 2016
    ©2016 Monographs
  • Title: The Hermeneutics of an African-Igbo Theology

    The Hermeneutics of an African-Igbo Theology

    by Peter Chidi Okuma (Author) 2015
    ©2015 Monographs
  • Title: The Church as Hermeneutical Community and the Place of Embodied Faith in Joseph Ratzinger and Lewis S. Mudge
  • Title: Elements of Hermeneutic Pragmatics

    Elements of Hermeneutic Pragmatics

    Agency and Interpretation
    by Tahir Wood (Author) 2014
    ©2015 Monographs
  • Title: A Hermeneutical Approach to Religious Discourse in Mexican Narrative

    A Hermeneutical Approach to Religious Discourse in Mexican Narrative

    by Catherine L. Caufield (Author)
    ©2003 Monographs
  • Title: Towards an Internormative Hermeneutics for Social Justice

    Towards an Internormative Hermeneutics for Social Justice

    Principles of Justice and Recognition in John Rawls and Axel Honneth
    by Christiana Idika (Author) 2018
    ©2018 Thesis
  • Title: The Art of Equanimity: A Study on the Theological Hermeneutics of Saint Anselm of Canterbury

    The Art of Equanimity: A Study on the Theological Hermeneutics of Saint Anselm of Canterbury

    by Emery de Gaál Gyulai (Author)
    ©2002 Postdoctoral Thesis
  • Hermeneutic Commentaries

    ISSN: 1043-5735

    "The question of “interpretation” of the text is at the center of this collection of monographs and commentaries on classical literatures. Interpretation starts with the realisation that at the outset, the sense of a text is an hypothesis to be gradually and constantly revised and ascertained. Grammar, syntax, and rhetoric are certainly the necessary part for this critical operation, but they fall short of giving full sense to the signification of the text. A philological commentary establishes the texts as close as possible to the author’s text, and provides the information necessary for modern readers to understand what the text meant to its contemporary users. But besides the impossibility of achieving this task fully, this sort of information does not provide the sense of the text as it opens itself to the questions of its individuality and universality, its historicity and its transhistorical iterability, as it hides the rules and game of its composition, its difference in order to show its identity. These opposite poles are constantly united and create a tension, a continuous oscillation that are the very domaine of the interpretative analysis, and the conditions of the text’s ever emerging sense . The hermeneutic circle, through which the critical hypothesis is constantly revised and made more precise, can be viewed also as a sort of deconstructive operation, a decomposing of the text in order to recompose it around its now discovered rules and games, of which the author is not necessarily always fully aware. Because of these conditions the sense of a text is more open to the critics than to its author; this point makes the critics conscious that as they are “reading”, they are in some way “writing” the text." "The question of “interpretation” of the text is at the center of this collection of monographs and commentaries on classical literatures. Interpretation starts with the realisation that at the outset, the sense of a text is an hypothesis to be gradually and constantly revised and ascertained. Grammar, syntax, and rhetoric are certainly the necessary part for this critical operation, but they fall short of giving full sense to the signification of the text. A philological commentary establishes the texts as close as possible to the author’s text, and provides the information necessary for modern readers to understand what the text meant to its contemporary users. But besides the impossibility of achieving this task fully, this sort of information does not provide the sense of the text as it opens itself to the questions of its individuality and universality, its historicity and its transhistorical iterability, as it hides the rules and game of its composition, its difference in order to show its identity. These opposite poles are constantly united and create a tension, a continuous oscillation that are the very domaine of the interpretative analysis, and the conditions of the text’s ever emerging sense . The hermeneutic circle, through which the critical hypothesis is constantly revised and made more precise, can be viewed also as a sort of deconstructive operation, a decomposing of the text in order to recompose it around its now discovered rules and games, of which the author is not necessarily always fully aware. Because of these conditions the sense of a text is more open to the critics than to its author; this point makes the critics conscious that as they are “reading”, they are in some way “writing” the text." "The question of “interpretation” of the text is at the center of this collection of monographs and commentaries on classical literatures. Interpretation starts with the realisation that at the outset, the sense of a text is an hypothesis to be gradually and constantly revised and ascertained. Grammar, syntax, and rhetoric are certainly the necessary part for this critical operation, but they fall short of giving full sense to the signification of the text. A philological commentary establishes the texts as close as possible to the author’s text, and provides the information necessary for modern readers to understand what the text meant to its contemporary users. But besides the impossibility of achieving this task fully, this sort of information does not provide the sense of the text as it opens itself to the questions of its individuality and universality, its historicity and its transhistorical iterability, as it hides the rules and game of its composition, its difference in order to show its identity. These opposite poles are constantly united and create a tension, a continuous oscillation that are the very domaine of the interpretative analysis, and the conditions of the text’s ever emerging sense . The hermeneutic circle, through which the critical hypothesis is constantly revised and made more precise, can be viewed also as a sort of deconstructive operation, a decomposing of the text in order to recompose it around its now discovered rules and games, of which the author is not necessarily always fully aware. Because of these conditions the sense of a text is more open to the critics than to its author; this point makes the critics conscious that as they are “reading”, they are in some way “writing” the text."

    1 publications

  • Hermeneutics of Art

    7 publications

  • Title: Existential Openness in Law

    Existential Openness in Law

    A hermeneutical approach to Carl Schmitt’s early legal thought
    by Diego Pérez Lasserre (Author) 2024
    ©2024 Monographs
  • Title: Revelation, History, and Truth

    Revelation, History, and Truth

    A Hermeneutics of Dogma
    by Eduardo J. Echeverria (Author) 2017
    ©2018 Monographs
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