Constitutive Rhetoric In The Discourse Of Three Popular Founders Of Charismatic Churches In Ghana
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University of Cape Coast
Abstract
Ghanaian Charismatic pastors and their churches have been studied quite much
except that few studies have explored constitutive rhetoric in their discourse. This
thesis attempted to fill this gap by exploring how Duncan-Williams, Mensah
Otabil, and Agyinasare, three popular Ghanaian Charismatic leaders, use
constitutive rhetoric in their discourse to create organised identity for their
churches. Qualitative case study design and purposive sampling method were
used to select the three pastors with their churches based on their popularity and
representativeness of the Charismatic phenomenon in Ghana. The data comprised
four website texts and fifteen sermons of the pastors for December 31-All-Nights
from YouTube. Qualitative content analysis foregrounded by Constitutive
Rhetoric Theory served as the analytical framework. It was found that the
website texts namely history, beliefs statement, vision statement, and mission
statement used rhetorical principles of naming and identification by an assumed
we to create the churches as a collective or community. Adjectives, adverbs, and
syntax were also used to construct each church and the pastor as the best to
attract memberships. Also, the sermons were created as deliberative and
epideictic rhetoric to construct the churches as a community and orient the
members towards future courses of action. The pastors used Aristotle‘s
persuasive strategies of ethos, pathos, and logos in their sermons to persuade
their audiences to accept and act on constituted identities. The findings have
implications for the scholarship on language use by Ghanaian Charismatic
pastors and for further research.
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xii,297p:,ill
