The shared corporeality of audible spoken voices and its theological implications
Sunil Chandy works across the domains of Theology, Art and Sound through creative practices and critical theory. He is currently a lecturer in Worship and the Creative Arts at London School of Theology. Chandy recently published Bible Noise: Reading Aloud, Listening Anew, a resource to creatively engage with the bible through sound
Words made flesh: the shared corporeality of audible spoken voices and its theological implications - A conversation is a sharing of oneself and others. Listening and speaking in their rudimentary forms are physical acts and they become a sharing of bodies. This corporeal sharing has implications that are theological and artistic. In this presentation, I suggest possibilities that arise for interactions of faith and creativity.