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Visual Culture: Reading Its Rhetoric

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Title: Visual Culture: Reading Its Rhetoric


1
Visual Culture Reading Its Rhetoric
  • English 110
  • Group Project

2
The Power of Signs
  • Rhetorical analysis may also yield
    interpretations that foreground ideology and the
    power of representation (including the production
    and circulation of texts)
  • Ideology The beliefs, interests, and values that
    determine one's interpretations or judgements.

3
Objectives
  • Focus on icons as rich sites for rhetorical and
    cultural analysis
  • Model how the range of associations and
    observations for interpreting icons are governed
    by context

4
Icons
  • Icon (n), iconic (adj), an icon is someone (often
    a celebrity) who enjoys a commanding or
    representative place in popular culture.
  • Aaron Betsky, curator at San Francisco Museum of
    Modern Art, defines icons as "magnets of meaning
    onto which we project our memories, our hopes,
    our sense of self"

5
Pop Culture Icons
  • Match-Up Quiz (individually)
  • What values are attributed to iconic figures?
  • What does the People Magazine list suggest about
    the process of anointing certain public figures
    iconic status? Which icons speak to whom and why?
    What kind of people are not on the list?

6
Pop Culture Icons--Match-Up QuizAnswer Key(page
1 of 2)
  • Elvis Presley the pelvis
  • Oprah Winfrey "If she can do it, anyone can."
  • Marilyn Monroe blonde bombshell
  • Ellen Degeneres "Yep, I'm Gay"
  • Michael Jackson invented the moonwalk
  • Princess Diana "She was a diamond"
  • Michael Jordan "He became larger than his
    sport"
  • Madonna "She's done whatever she wanted"
  • Superman "a man's man"

7
Answer Key (cont.)
  • Mister Rogers "The last of the good guys"
  • John F. Kennedy Jr. "prince of privilege and
    tragedy
  • Elizabeth Taylor "The closest thing we have to
    American royalty
  • Muhammad Ali "I'm the greatest
  • Bill Clinton "I did not have sex with that
    woman
  • Ben Affleck "Your basic tall, dark, and
    handsome
  • Arnold Schwarzenegger "I'll be back"

8
The American Flag
  • The American Flag is entirely semiotic.
  • The American Flag substitutes signs (stars and
    stripes) for things (13 original
    colonies--stripes 50 starsstates)
  • These signs achieve their meaning through
    association with a system--the network within
    which signs function.

9
The American Flag as Image Icon
  • Generate associations with your students
  • Patriotism
  • Independence
  • Freedom
  • Nationalism
  • what else?
  • Varying contexts in which image icon appears
  • National monuments
  • Protests
  • where else?

10
American Flag as IconAdvertisement
11
Generating an Interpretation
  • patriotic image of multicultural affluence
  • an image of the American Dream and social class
    mobility
  • an image of leisure and prestige and culture
  • an image of independence

12
Generating Analytical Claims
  • That advertisers depend on the fact that we know
    a great deal about the messages that certain
    images convey.
  • They count on a few generalized meanings
    (patriotism, opportunity, independence, and so
    on).
  • In order to relay meaning, visual language
    depends on familiarity, patterns of use,
    composition, references to other images, and the
    context in which the image appears.

13
Rhetorical Contexts
14
Generating a Thesis
  • Weak Thesis Context shapes the meaning of an
    icon.
  • Stronger Thesis A comparative analysis of a
    Tommy Hilfiger ad and Faith Ringgold's painting
    "Flag of the Moon" reveals how context alters the
    meaning ascribed to images of the American flag.
  • Even Stronger While advertisers such as Hilfiger
    use the image of the American flag to convey
    loyalty, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness,
    Faith Ringgolds painting reveals a profound
    irony in the use of this icon by exposing those
    aspects of American culture, such as inequality,
    racism, often rendered invisible.
  • See pages 122- 135 in Writing Analytically

15
Generating a Working Thesis
  • A theory about the meaning of evidence
  • search for something that raises questions
  • treat as hypothesis
  • evolve your thesis--move it forward
  • ask So what?
  • dont abandon conflicting evidence or
    interpretations
  • qualify thesis after initial formulations

16
5 kinds of weak theses (Writing Analytically, Ch
7)
  • Makes no claim
  • are obviously true
  • restate conventional wisdom
  • offer personal conviction as the basis for the
    claim
  • make an overly broad claim
  • Raise specific issues
  • Find an area of inquiry
  • Seek to complicate
  • Try on other points of view
  • Convert broad categories and generic claims to
    more qualified assertions

17
ActivityReading Icons
  • As a class
  • Generate an interpretation of distributed images
  • What icons are present in each image?
  • What ideas, events, ideologies do you associate
    with each image?
  • Does the meaning of the icon shift from one image
    to the other? If so, what accounts for such
    differences?
  • In pairs
  • Generate two thesis statements that emerge from
    your analysis a weak and a strong example.
  • Turn in your thesis statements (to be posted on
    WebCT)
  • As a class
  • Share observations about group activity
  • Question and Answer

18
Analyzing Icons
19
Examples Weak Thesis
20
Examples Strong Thesis
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