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“Oral,” “Literate,” or “Appropriate”

Author: David
Date: 09.06.2010
Category: Media & Technology, Unreached People Groups, Ethnicity

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Originally Posted in English

Sometimes it is easy to try to make one size fit all, but people are all different and what works for one may not work for another.  Still we can categorize some to help us strategize better.  But what do some of the categories mean.  In dealing with orality, the Merriam-Webster’s Dictionary primary definition of “oral” is: “Uttered by the mouth or in words.”  Orality is the noun of oral.

The vision of International Orality Network (ION) is: To influence the body of Christ to make disciples of all oral learners.  In this context “oral learners” are those people that only know or prefer communication styles that employ characteristics typical to oral societies. These styles include other communication art forms beyond what Merriam-Webster defines as “oral.”

“Orality” in this context is defined as communicating thought through culturally appropriate styles or art forms by way of unwritten (other than literate) expressions.  Of course, for most of history, these oral communication styles were the primary way of communicating.  It includes communication art forms like: Narratives, Proverbs, Songs, Music, Poetry, Dialogues, Drama, Riddles, Parables, Thematic Questions, Dance, and Visual Arts. 

Visual arts include the art of “signing” which the deaf primarily use to communicate.  Often we think of signing as communicating with the hands, but in reality it includes virtually the whole body.  Last year I was exposed to extensive interaction with deaf people at a conference and, besides the use of various sign languages simultaneously, they worshipped in these languages with great beauty.  To them, it is a real communication art form, but not an oral form of communication, even though it does fit in the broader context of the people ION desires to serve.

Sometimes people talk about “orality” when they talk exclusively about “storying,” which actually is a very popular way of communicating in an oral fashion.  True “orality” is more than storying, even though in some way stories most of the time communicate the message.  These stories don’t need to be shared as a narrative, but they can be in any communication art form.  Considering that writing is an art too, stories are then also not exclusive to oral communication and they have been and certainly will continue to be written down.

Now, from a traditional literate perspective, there is nothing like being able to read and write, because we feel that ink provides a much better permanent record than anything else.  It also helps us to research libraries full of books (if they are at least in a language that I can understand).  I would say that, if it ever was true, this is certainly not true anymore, since most things are stored today in an electronic format and that can be just as easily be an audio recording, a video, as a document with words using letters or any combination of these.  Of course, print will remain an important way of communicating for the foreseeable future, but its role is changing and oral communication art forms are being recognized more and more again as important factors in effective communication.

Keywords: oral, orality, literacy, appropriate, communication, communicaiton art forms, deaf

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PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down TStout (1)
Paraguay

I think you are on the right track here, when you say we need to think about more than just storying when we think of communicating truth to oral learners, but I think we need to go even further and consider how oral people process information and what are the other oral pedagogies that we can use to teach them even beyond differing art forms.

This group is dedicated to exploring these concept, please come by and download some of the articles that are available.


10.07.2010
PhContributeBy
Reply Flag 0 Thumbs Up Thumbs Down David (0)   
United States
@ TStout:

Thank you for your comment and I fully agree.  Thank you also for linking it to your group.


22.07.2010

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