Christianity: Details about 'Form Criticism'
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Form criticism is a method of biblical criticism applied as a means of analyzing the typical features of texts, especially their conventional forms or structures, in order to relate them to their sociological contexts. Form criticism begins by identifying a text's genre or conventional literary form, such as parables, proverbs, epistles, or love poems. It goes on to seek the sociological setting for each text's genre; its "situation in life" (German: Sitz in Leben). For example, the sociological setting of a law is a court, or the sociological setting of a psalm of praise (hymn) is a worship context, or that of a proverb might be a father-to-son admonition. Having identified and analyzed the text's genre-pericopes, form criticism goes on to ask how these smaller genre-pericopes contribute to the purpose of the text as a whole. Form criticism was originally developed for Old Testament studies by Hermann Gunkel. It later came to be applied the Gospels by Karl Ludwig Schmidt, Martin Dibelius and Rudolf Bultmann, among others.
Formkritik
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