John Paul II's frequent use of international pastoral visits to
communicate directly with local church members and the society in
which they live has become a distinctive mark of his papacy. While
media coverage of these visits is extensive, most commentators are
perplexed by the pope's enigmatic style. This book explains this
ambiguity by examining John Paul II's rhetorical strategy and
analyzing his purposeful choices in planning, arranging themes,
managing form and imagery, and performing the visit. Using the 1987
visit to the United States as a prototype for rhetorical study, the
author treats the visit's discourse and symbols, and their contexts
and arrangements, as observable data that can be interpreted using
the accommodation-resistance dialectic to locate religious
vocabularies in relation to secularizing tendencies. The pope's
overseas pastoral visits emerge as a rhetorical response to a
church and society deeply affected by secularization and pluralism,
and as a new way of speaking about the sacred.
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