A Contrastive Rhetorical Analysis of Hypocrisy in Christian and Islamic Moral Religious Contexts

Authors

  • Riyadh Tariq Kadhim Al-Ameedi University of Al-Ameed / College of Basic Education for Women / Department of English, Iraq
  • Noor Othman Adday University of Babylon/ College of Education for Human Sciences /Department of English, Iraq

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.55568/amd.v13i50.231-256

Keywords:

hypocrisy, rhetoric, Christianity, Islam, pragmatic strategies, rhetorical devices, pretense, inconsistency, complacency and blame

Abstract

    Being hypocrite is to act in opposition to one's inner status. The goodness that he conveys is in contrast to the evilness that he has in his heart and intention. It is simply to be a double-faced human or a deceptive one. This study sheds light on hypocrisy as a vice. It investigates the Christian and Islamic tackle of such issue regarding its types, the rhetorical construction throughout the pragmatic strategies and the rhetorical devices that are applied.

    The results reveal that there is divergence between Christianity and Islam in the thematic and formal representation of hypocrisy in their moral religious contexts. Christian contexts adopts persuasion and instruction as pragmatic strategies whereas Islamic ones resort to persuasion and hinting. The results also show that the types of hypocrisy that are highlighted vary in their type and number of occurrence.

Author Biographies

Riyadh Tariq Kadhim Al-Ameedi, University of Al-Ameed / College of Basic Education for Women / Department of English, Iraq

PhD. in Linguistics and Translation/ Professor

Noor Othman Adday, University of Babylon/ College of Education for Human Sciences /Department of English, Iraq

MA in English Linguistics /Researcher

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Published

2024-06-30