Tese
O discurso bíblico hierarquizante das traduções neotestamentárias: uma análise exegética e de discurso.
Fecha
2021-11-29Registro en:
PESTANA, Álvaro César. O discurso bíblico hierarquizante das traduções neotestamentárias : uma análise exegética e de discurso. 2021 597 f. Tese (Doutorado) - Universidade Católica de Pernambuco. Programa de Pós-graduação em Ciências da Religião. Doutorado em Ciências da Religião, 2021.
Autor
Pestana, Álvaro César
Resumen
New Testament translations are subject to a hierarchical discourse that does not
come from the fraternal and egalitarian environment of early Christianity. Based
on this hermeneutic suspicion, we demonstrate through qualitative bibliographic
research, how these translations were instrumentalized in the service of
authoritarianism, which is not present in the Greek originals. A reading of the New
Testament through exegesis and philology proves the fraternal, egalitarian, and
non-hierarchical praxis in Christian communities. Early Christianity refused to
adopt or adapt for itself the hierarchies of the social organization of the
surrounding society so that this refusal is evident in the vocabulary used and in
the social practices described and encouraged in the New Testament. The
subsequent hierarchical discourse gradually imposed itself on Christianity over
the centuries, introducing itself in the New Testament translations into
Portuguese since the 17th century. Taking Discourse Analysis as a theoreticalmethodological path and through an analytical model adapted to our research
object, we approached a corpus of nine New Testament texts in thirty-nine
translations into the Portuguese language to highlight the elements of this
hierarchy in the discourse hosted or promoted by the translators. The analysis of
the hierarchical elements in the translations of the corpus allowed a comparative
tabulation of the results. At the end, guidelines and proposals are presented for
a hermeneutics that promotes non-hierarchical, fraternal, and egalitarian biblical
translations, in line with the primitive Christian discourse and in contrast to the
modern hegemonic hierarchical discourse.