The semiosis of prayer and the creation of plausible fictional worlds

Authors

  • J. Södergård Uppsala University

Keywords:

Ritual, Linguistics, Prayer, Semiotics, Narration, Philosophy and religion

Abstract

Prayer and incantation can perhaps be said to be 'mechanisms' that promise that lack will be liquidated and that there is an unlimited signator, a father, or some other metaphysical creature, standing behind and legitimizing the discourse. A way of communicating with the Unlimited that is privileged by an interpretive community that read the prayers aloud and enacted the magical stage-scripts. These highly overlapping categories function as one of the most common subforms of religious discourse for the creation, actualization and maintenance of plausible fictional worlds. They are liminal and transitional mechanisms that manipulate an empirical reader to phase-shift from an actual world to a plausible, by being inscribed in a possible and fictional world, thus creating a model reader, that perceives and acts according to the plausible world outlined by a given interpretive community, and that hears god talking in voces magicae and in god-speaking silence.
Section
Articles

Published

1999-02-01

How to Cite

Södergård, J. (1999). The semiosis of prayer and the creation of plausible fictional worlds. Scripta Instituti Donneriani Aboensis, 17(2). https://doi.org/10.30674/scripta.67276