Die rol van die patriargale diskoers in pastorale gesprekke
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.17570/ngtt.2003.v44n1.e12Abstract
The stereotypical patriarchal discourse has been part of humankind for thousands of years. Since the Second World War, rapid changes have occurred in the roles fulfilled by women. The traditional family with male headship, where the husband is employed and the wife is supposed to be at home, looking after the children, hardly exists any more.These changes have created new problems, which put pressure on both sexes. A power struggle between the sexes; uncertainty in terms of fulfilling a specific gender role; violence against women; men overreacting to the point of being weak; absent fathers, and increasing stress in a post-modern society.
The pastor utilising the narrative approach can assist people to look differently at their own stories and guide them to view their own stories from a new perspective. Specific conversational questions, genograms, eco maps and reframing are ways in facilitating story-telling, story-listening and story-development.
This article uses the metaphor of a minefield. The “mines” are the different problems in the patriarchal discourse; the pastor is the hearing aid being utilised by the sapper to listen to old noises in a new way. The study unfolds with a creative tension between defusing and explosion concerning a narrative approach towards the patriarchal discourse in pastoral family therapy.
Published
2003-06-30
How to Cite
Muller, J., & Neethling, W. (2003). Die rol van die patriargale diskoers in pastorale gesprekke. NGTT | Nederduitse Gereformeerde Teologiese Tydskrif, 44(1&2). https://doi.org/10.17570/ngtt.2003.v44n1.e12
Issue
Section
From the Editor | Van die Redakteur
License
Copyright of all NGTT material belongs to the Pieter de Waal Neethling Trust (PDWN Trust). The PDWN Trust is a trust fund established in 1932 with the aim of promoting quality theological research and publications.
The PDWN Trust pledges to maintain a legitimate scholarly record of the author's work and to defend the author's article against plagiarism and copyright infringement.
The PDWN Trust is committed to full Open Source publishing. This means that all articles published in NGTT will gradually be made freely available online. Authors maintain the right to:
- Share and self-archive their work.
- Make printed copies of their article for educational use.
- Present their article at a meeting or conference and distribute printed copies of the article
- Adapt and expand their published journal article to make it suitable for their thesis or dissertation.
- Republish the article (ensuring that the original article is cited as published in NGTT).
For any questions or queries in this regard, please contact the Editor.