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tropology
(redirected from tropological)

   Also found in: Wikipedia 0.03 sec.
tro·pol·o·gy  (tr-pl-j)
n. pl. tro·pol·o·gies
1. The use of tropes in speech or writing.
2. A mode of biblical interpretation insisting on the morally edifying sense of tropes in the Scriptures.

[Late Latin tropologia, from Late Greek tropologi : Greek tropos, trope; see trope + Greek -logi, -logy.]

tropo·logic (trp-ljk, trp-), tropo·logi·cal (--kl) adj.
tropo·logi·cal·ly adv.

tropology [trɒˈpɒlədʒɪ]
n pl -gies
1. (Literature / Rhetoric) Rhetoric the use of figurative language in speech or writing
2. (Christian Religious Writings / Theology) Christian theol the educing of moral or figurative meanings from the Scriptures
3. (Literature / Rhetoric) a treatise on tropes or figures of speech
[via Late Latin from Greek tropalogia; see trope, -logy]
tropologic , tropological adj

tropology
1. the use of flgurative language in writing.
2. a treatise on figures of speech or tropes. — tropologic, tropological, adj.
See also: Rhetoric and Rhetorical Devices
a method of interpreting biblical literature emphasizing the moral implications of the tropes, or figures of speech, used in its composition. — tropological, adj.
See also: Bible


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Six chapters discuss the formal and tropological devices deployed by Freudian psychoanalysis to establish human sexual drives as atavistic; the showcasing of the atavistic in medical photography; sexual desire as animal atavism in Frank Norris's Vandover and the Brute and Djuna Barnes's Nightwood; discourses of heredity in relation to ideas of modern progress or decay in the Tarzan and Dr.
At the beginning of this course, Luther was fully immersed in the fourfold medieval hermeneutic, that spoke of the literal, allegorical, tropological (or moral), and eschatological meanings of each passage.
He writes, "From my current space of observation, I want to suggest that a tropological mode--one duly informed by interdisciplinary attention to methods and models of various areas (including the material and economic) of intellectual inquiry--is akin to a blues mode of proceeding" (111-12).
 
 
 
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