Thursday, August 28, 2008

Kingston's "No Name Woman"

Answer number 2 after reading Kingston's "No Name Woman."

Wednesday, August 27, 2008

SOAPSTone and Rhetoric Terms




HW: Review for quiz tomorrow on the following terms:

SOAPSTone

Anadiplosis: occurs when the last word in a sentence, clause, or phrase is repeated at the beginning of the next sentence, clause, or phrase.

Ex. “They call for you: the general who became a slave; the slave who became a gladiator; the gladiator who defied an Emperor.” – Gladiator

“Our time has come. Suffering breeds character; character breeds faith; in the end faith will not disappoint.” Jesse Jackson, 1984 Democratic National Convention


Anaphora: Repetition of the same word or phrase at the beginning of lines, clauses, or sentences.

Ex. This royal throne of kings, this sceptred isle,
This earth of majesty, this seat of Mars,
This other Eden, demi-paradise.
Shakespeare, Richard II


Anastrophe: Inversion of the usual word order in a sentence or parts of a sentence.

Ex. A promising Jedi, you are. - Yoda



Asyndeton: Omitting connecting words, usually conjunctions, between clauses.

Ex. We laugh, cry, scream, shout.



Polysyndeton: Adding connecting words (conjunctions) between clauses for effect.

Ex. We laugh and cry and scream and shout.



Epanalepsis: Beginning and ending a clause or sentence with the same word or words – a circular sentence.


"Common sense is not so common." - Voltaire


Epistrophe: Repetition of the same word or phrase at the end of lines.

Ex. I do not like dogs. When did I ever say I like dogs? And why would you possibly buy me a dog?

Thursday, August 21, 2008

DAY 4


Agenda:

1. SLLIDD TOP
2. Sedaris: Hyperbole, Tone, etc.
3. Sanders analysis
4. Paper Assignment

HW (p.203): Read "Salvation" and answer number two on page 205.

Wednesday, August 20, 2008

DAY 3


Thursday: SOAPSTone and SLIDD TOP Practice Quiz

HW (p. 378): Read "Me Talk Pretty One Day" and answer questions 1 and 2.

Tuesday, August 19, 2008

DAY 2- PATHOS, ETHOS, LOGOS


APPEALING TO YOUR AUDIENCE

Audience: The audience is the writer's targeted reader or readers. The relationship between the writer and the audience is critical. You should consider the kind of information, language, and overall approach that will appeal to a specific audience. Here are some questions to ask yourself during the prewriting stage of writing your persuasive essays:
Who exactly is the audience?
What do they know? Believe? Expect?
Will the audience disagree with me?
What will they want me to address or answer?
What type of language will I use? What type of evidence?
What strategies will I use to convince them?

PATHOS - EMOTIONAL
Arguments from the heart are designed to appeal to audience’s emotions and feelings. Emotions can direct people in powerful ways to think more carefully about what they do. In hearing or reading an argument that is heavy on emotional appeals, ask yourself these questions: How is the speaker or author appealing to the audience’s emotions? Why? Always try to name the emotions being appealed to (love, sympathy, anger, fear, hate, patriotism, compassion) and figure out how the emotion is being created in the audience.
Emotional appeals are often just examples - ones chosen to awaken specific feelings in an audience. Although frequently abused, the emotional appeal is a legitimate aspect of argument, for speakers and authors want their audience to care about the issues they address. This is most useful with a sympathetic audience.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-AqlLyLeJuQ

Here are some, but not all, techniques that are used in this type of appeal:
• Include an anecdotes-- a moving story that prove your opinion
• Use emotional language or “catchy words” or language that involves the senses to appeal to people’s values or guilty consciences.
• Include connotative language -- the suggestions, associations, and emotional overtones attached to a word

Where do we see this in the Sanders essay?

• Include a bias or prejudice. Omitting or not using information that may conflict with or weaken the author’s opinion.
• predicting extreme outcomes of events/dire predication in order to create a sense of urgency
• Use humor

LOGOS - LOGICAL
Loosely defined, logos refers to the use of logic, reasons, facts, statistics, data, and numbers. Logical appeals are aimed at the mind of the audience, their thinking side. Logos can also be arrangement or organization; the author arranges things in a logical order. When a speaker or writer uses logical appeals, he or she will avoid inflammatory language, and the writer will carefully connect its reasons to supporting evidence. This is the most useful appeal with an unsympathetic audience.
Here are some, but not all, techniques that are used in this type of appeal:
• Give logical reasons why your audience should believe you (keep in mind that not all reasons are equally persuasive for all audiences).
• Provide and/or classify evidence that proves or explains your reasons
• Use facts use information that can be checked by testing, observing firsthand, or reading reference materials to support an opinion.
• Use statistics–percentages, numbers, and charts to highlight significant data
• Quote expert opinion––testimony by people who are recognized as authorities on the subject. This is most useful with an unsympathetic audience.
• Cite examples--
• Use cause and effect, compare and contrast, and analogy
• Argue from precedent--this has always been the case.

ETHOS – ETHICAL
Ethical appeals depend on the credibility or training of the author. Audiences tend to believe writers who seem honest, wise, and trustworthy. An author or speaker exerts ethical appeal when the language itself impresses the audience that the speaker is a person of intelligence, high moral character and good will. Thus a person wholly unknown to an audience can by words alone win that audience’s trust and approval. Aristotle emphasized the importance of impressing upon the audience that the speaker is a person of good sense and high moral character. Ethos can also mean fairness; that the author or speaker sees the other side.
This is the strongest appeal.
• Make the audience believe that the writer is trustworthy.
• Demonstrate that the writer put in research time.
• Support reasons with appropriate logical evidence
• Show concern about communicating with the audience.

Analyzing a Rhetorical Situation

SOAPSTONE:

S – Subject
O – Occasion
A – Audience
P – Purpose of speaker
S – Speaker

TONE

Identify these five elements whenever possible to read contextually.

Analyzing a Passage

Consider SLLIDD TOP:

S – Syntax: defining/effective sentence structure
L – Language: type used (refer to ‘language’ words) and connection to audience
(do a SOAPS)
L – Literary devices: metaphor, personification, hyperbole, etc.
I – Imagery: visual, auditory, tactile, olfactory, gustatory
D – Diction: connotative word choice
D – Detail: concrete aspects of the passage

T – Tone: identify specifically/provide a pair of different yet complementary
tones (refer to ‘tone’ words)
O – Organization: movement in the passage between tones, ideas, defining
literary/rhetorical strategies
P – Point of view: perspective of the passage and significance (do a SOAPS)

Frequently, the argument is a combination of appeals.

HW (p. 302): Read Orwell's "Shooting and Elephant" and answer questions 2 and 4. Regarding question 4, you may converse with other members of the class.

Saturday, August 16, 2008

Welcome to Day 1





As you can see, I am a friend of the interweb; as such, I insist on having open and constant communication on the web. We will have quasi-nightly assignments that require you to post on this site. Please be sure to complete these posts during the previous evening. There is a time attached to each post.

HW (p.120): Read Bernard Cooper's "A Clack of Tiny Sparks: Remembrances of a Gay Boyhood." Answer Questions 1 and 2 on the blog.