Powerpoint 1: Erica Buzonowski
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Transcript of Powerpoint 1: Erica Buzonowski
WRITING YOUR FIRST RHETORICAL ANALYSIS
PAPER:BACKGROUND
KNOWLEDGE
Erica Buzonowski
WHAT IS RHETORIC? The art of effective and persuasive
speaking or writing. Language is designed to impress and
persuade. Choosing the best possible means of
persuasion to fit the situation and the audience.
TYPES OF RHETORICAL TEXT All text has a rhetorical purpose, either…
verbal (i.e. speeches, lectures, pep talks)visual (i.e. magazine ads, TV/web
commercials)written (i.e. editorials, letters,
applications, articles)
RHETORIC ATTEMPTS TO PERSUADE: Persuasions attempt…
to move us to take action. to challenge us to think about something
with a new perspective. to inspire us. to entertain us. to convince us to believe something is true. to analyze a situation. to show understanding or compassion. to define, explain, condemn, or criticize.
WHERE DID THIS COME FROM?In ancient Greece, the abilities to read
and write were limited. Most legal decisions were decided in public based on oral speeches. Aristotle studied speakers and audiences observed what was effective and created a systematic approach to persuade the audience.
Ethos, logos, pathos, organization, tone, allusion, analogy, anecdote, assertion, and authority are all apart of this persuasive approach.
ETHOS Appeal to the authors credibility. Be aware of…
The audience. Anticipate the questions and concerns they may have.
Sensitivity to the issue. Thoroughly consider the issue from both sides.
Trustworthiness. Support claims with evidence that the audience will accept.
LOGOS Appeal to logic and reason using
facts statistics scientific reasoning logical reasoning common sense
PATHOS Attempt to persuade by arousing
emotions such as sympathy, empathy, shock, fear, sadness, guilt, and guilt.
Attempt to persuade by arousing desires to be like others, to be included, to have love, sex, friendship, partnership, wealth, status, or to impress.
ORGANIZATION Dividing an essay effectively between
the introduction, body, and conclusion. Introduction: How does the reader catch
your attention regarding the topic?Body: How is it structured?Conclusion: How is he argument closed? (Be aware of characteristics that signal
different sections.)
TONE Characterize the authors voice
Intelligent?Hard-driving?Laid back?Angry?Funny? Describe this tone and cite examples to
illustrate. Look beyond content of the piece, how does
the author create that tone (word choice, humor, witty wordplay, sentence structure?)
LIST strategies you think the author uses.
ALLUSION A reference, especially a covert,
passing, or indirect one. An indirect reference to a commonly
known event, person, story, piece of pop culture, or history.
Can function as ethos, logos, and/or pathos appeals (depending on the nature & authors intent).
A powerful way for authors to further connect their readers to the piece.
ANALOGY A comparison of two different things,
events, relationships, or situations for the purpose of ‘encouraging’ readers to assume that what is true about one thing is also true about the other.
This can be used in any type of appeal. Does the comparison makes sense? Is the analogy truly relevant to the topic
that is being argued, or does it make a memorable statement that is not really a valid comparison?
ANECDOTE A story, not necessarily about the
author or any other real person. Common in rhetoric, but there are
challenges in relying too heavily on anecdotal support.
ASSERTION ‘Declaration; a forthright statement’ (FYC
36)A statement or claim the author makes with
the expectation that the reader will believe it is true.
Foremost rhetorical strategy- used in every argument.
Sometimes factual, but that’s not always the case.Simply saying something is true doesn’t make
it true.Authors often need to provide evidence to
support assertions.
ASSERTION (CONTINUED) In assertions, there might be obvious
opinions.Could sound convincingly enough to be true
without evidence. Too many unsupported assertions is
propaganda- not argument. The author will lose credibility.
Editorials have one main assertion with secondary assertions in body paragraphs.
AUTHORITY (LAST ONE!) Using expert testimony, statistics,
and/or facts from credible sources to support an assertion.To evaluate credibility of an authority, you
need to consider how much detail the author provides.
Citations- facts usually used.
Create a logos appeal. Facts, statistics, and expert testimony by nature are logical and reasonable.
GOOD LUCK!
WORKS CITEDTaylor, Marcy, Elizabeth Brockman,
Melinda Kreth, and Laura Grow. "Chapter 3: Rhetorical Analysis." First Year Composition: English 101. Third ed. Dubque, Iowa: Kendall/Hunt, 2008. 29-47. Print.