Dialog: Perbedaan antara revisi

Konten dihapus Konten ditambahkan
Tidak ada ringkasan suntingan
Tidak ada ringkasan suntingan
Baris 1:
{{terjemah|Inggris}}
 
'''Dialogue''' (sometimes spelled '''dialog''' in [[American English]]<ref>See entry on "dialogue (n)" in the Oxford English Dictionary, 2nd ed.</ref>) is a [[literature|literary]] and [[theatrical]] form consisting of a written or spoken [[conversation]]al exchange between two or more people. Its chief historical origins as [[narrativenarasi]], [[philosophy|philosophical]] or [[didactic]] device are to be found in [[ancient Greek literature|classical Greek]] and [[Indian literature]], in particular in the ancient art of [[rhetoric]].
 
Having lost touch almost entirely in the 19th century with its underpinnings in rhetoric, the notion of dialogue emerged transformed in the work of [[cultural criticism|cultural critics]] such as [[Mikhail Bakhtin]] and [[Paulo Freire]], [[theology|theologians]] such as [[Martin Buber]], as an [[existentialism|existential]] palliative to counter atomization and [[social alienation]] in mass [[industrial society]].