Abstract:
Practical theology is located in a fragile, vulnerable space between various
disciplines, where it is exposed to multiple different narratives. The author proposes
a postfoundational, narrative approach to practical theology that favours the local
over the global and the specific over generalisations. Africa is taken as the defining
context for the understanding and development of a specific postfoundational
practical theology. People and their stories are central, and this requires a coconstruction
of meaning with “co-researchers”. The author’s “seven movements”,
as published in other articles, is used with an Ubuntu research project as a case
study. The “seven movements” facilitate the telling and retelling of unheard stories,
particularly stories of the marginalised and vulnerable. This way of doing practical
theology takes the experiences of “co-researchers” seriously and conducts
research wíth people rather than on them. The researcher’s focus is concrete, local,
and contextual, but also extends beyond the local by engaging in transdisciplinary
conversation and developing interpretations that point beyond the local.
Description:
The essence of this article was originally presented as a paper at the Roundtable
discussion, International Academy of Practical Theology 15-20 July 2015,
Pretoria.