The major writing assignment in Unit 2 is a rhetorical analysis essay. You will explain why an audience would or would not find your primary text persuasive. You will use information learned from your secondary text to show key information about the context (the audience, the circumstances, or the speaker). By teaching you to think critically about audience and argumentation, this analysis will prepare you to write your persuasive essay in Unit 3.…
Thank you for taking the time to read my paper and offer compliments. I like how you describe the structure of my paper, how the rhetorical strategies are used, and how the analysis is understood. It helps me to know what needs to be revised and edited. Thank you for also providing examples from the…
The Price of Gas is Outrageous – And It is Going To Get Even Higher…
In Dinesh D' Souza’s essay, "Two Cheers for Colonialism,” he attempts to convince the audience about several concerns regarding colonialism and Western civilization. He employs various methods to make the audience see his point of view. He uses a lot of emotional appeals, humor, ethos, logos, and anecdotes to argue that the West did not become influential through colonial oppression. He says, "By suggesting that the West became dominant because it is oppressive, they provide an explanation for Western global dominance without encouraging white racial arrogance. They relieve the Third World of blame for its wretchedness,"(1) and "The West did not become rich and powerful through colonial oppression. It makes no sense to claim that the West grew rich and strong by conquering other countries and taking their stuff"(2). He uses rhetorical strategies such as evidence-based arguments like the one above, to make a strong logical appeal to the audience.…
I am quite excited to further pursue DOCC's goal of open dialogue once on campus. Nurturing a viewpoint-tolerant environment gives me hope for the future, wherein I hope that both mine and my fellow peers' viewpoints are questioned. While many college students are left-leaning, I firmly believe that all students should feel free to share their opinions.…
Sand between my toes and enjoying some sun while gathered around with a group of friends is what I call, a definition of a great time. The ad Tampax Pearl from Seventeen magazines sells the product through the use of rhetorical fallacies logos, ethos, and pathos. There are six fallacies, and throughout the magazine they are represented by the text, the women in the white bikini, and the beach: false cause, hasty generalization, non sequitur, and appeal to ignorance, false authority, and bandwagon. In the background are the sounds of waves clashing against one another, the sun beginning to lower, and the scent of a bonfire. The game of limbo used as an entertainment to influence laughter, and competition spread to one another.…
A large number of college graduates argue that their loan debt is comparable to a life sentence. In the article “A Lifetime of Debt? Not Likely” by Robin Wilson, argues that the college loan debt is not always as severe as some say and it almost always pays off in the long run. The article by Robin Wilson is effective in convincing the audience that taking out college loans in beneficial in the long run because she uses specific examples, logos and pathos appeals, structure and style to convince the reader to agree with her argument.…
Dave Chappelle returns to his hometown of Washington D.C. in the year 2000, during his tour around the country, to perform for the people of D.C. During his show “Killin’ Him Softly” Chappelle effectively uses rhetorical strategies by engaging his audience, understanding the culture he is addressing, as well as exemplifying the problem with racial stereotypes and the disparity of police brutality between the African American community and the white community.…
In light of the recent shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut, people across the country—especially politicians—have been pushing for immediate action towards gun policies. Some believe that the government should allow for guns in schools, others think that there needs to be more gun regulations and less firearms in the hands of citizens. Nicholas D. Kristof, a columnist for The New York Times, has a firm belief in the latter. In his essay, “Do We Have the Courage to Stop This?” faces the controversial issue of gun control. Kristof explains why he believes there should be more control on firearms and makes use of literary techniques to convince the reader.…
Composing my argument of inquiry was a lot more complicated than composing my rhetorical analysis. For my argument of inquiry, I had to the annotate my sources before I could synthesize them into an essay. My essay was organized by the different viewpoints accompanied with the supporting evidence I found. In my rhetorical analysis, I divided my essay into: the appeals Wacquant was making and the overall persuasiveness of the piece. However, I found it really difficult to organize these ideas. There was no synthesis needed in this essay. My writing process usually begin with annotation of my source(s) and/or detailed outline of my essay. I found that pre-writing works for me because I don’t do that my essay usually ends up not being cohesive…
Hillary Rodham Clinton once said that “There cannot be true democracy unless women's voices are heard.” In 1995, Aung San Suu Kyi delivered the speech “Keynote Address at the Beijing World Conference on Women” through a video, attempting to gain the rights women. Similarly, Margaret Atwood presented the speech “Spotty-handed Villainesses” to numerous conventions in 1994, with the idea of increasing the dimensions of feminism. These powerful speeches use a large variety of language forms and techniques specifically pathos, ethos and logos to express their aspirations, beliefs and values. Although these speeches are studied in written form, it is clear that the rhetorical devices allow the purpose of the speech to be recognized throughout time.…
I believe that the rhetorical strategy of narration is both seen differently in the article, “Unnatural Killers”, by John Grisham and the article, “The Case Against College Athletic Recruiting” by Ben Adler. Both appeal emotionally to the reader but one is a lot more logical in its approach then the other.…
Well-known Sci-fi writer, Ray Bradbury, in his novel, Fahrenheit 451, illustrates that relationships reflect who individuals are and who they want to be. Bradbury’s purpose is to promote the idea that a person should have the courage to listen to their own beliefs and thoughts of happiness rather than to blend in with society. He adopts a disoriented and poetic tone in order to appeal to similar feelings and experiences on a non-realistic scale in his young adult readers.…
Reading the whole article, the biggest things that stood out to me was on page 63; “It usually takes a lobster between thirty-five and forty-five seconds to die in boiling water.” I took some time to think and at first I came up with putting a lobster into a boiling pot of water. But I couldn’t find the metaphor in that because that was the main idea I wanted people to see. So I decided to draw a healthy tree falling into a wood chipper and how when it goes through a wood chipper, the time it takes to actually shred the wood into pieces of bark has its own time process just like when putting a lobster into a boiling pot of water.…
This semester my writing saw both the best of times, and the worst of times. My worst piece of writing is most definitely the first FRQ essay, which was a rhetorical analysis of one of the Onion’s articles. I have never held the most strength in rhetorical analysis. In years past when I would analyze the diction or syntax of an essay, I would experience immense difficulty. It was no different when it came to the first FRQ. I floundered, like a fish out of water, desperately searching for sentences I could analyze, words that I could pick apart. For me, the trouble with rhetorical analysis is that it is so focused on the small details. When I read anything, whether it be a book or an essay, I read the work as a whole. I never pay that much attention to the author’s word choice or the lengths of their sentences. To have to write about a subject that I don’t know much about, or pay much attention to, is always a struggle.…