Title: Rhetoric, Genre, Discipline:
1Rhetoric, Genre, Discipline
Shelley Reid English 325 September 23,
2009 (Font Samples from http//www.houseind.com)
2Warm-up
- Right hand up
- Left hand up
- Finger wiggle
- Partner location
- Introductions names projects
3Brandon
Melissa
Janette
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ine, and http//mediaonsugar.com
4Brandon Rhetoric
Melissa Discipline
Janette Genre
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ine, and http//mediaonsugar.com
5Rhetoric
- Use of available means to reach an audience
(Aristotle) - Use of words to form attitudes or induce
actions (Burke) - Author, Text, Audience
- Attention to context and purpose
- Situated, negotiated, dynamic
6Rhetoric helps readers
- Spot patterns and strategies
- Analyze argument wholes pieces
- Resist unwanted persuasion
- Address issues of ethics
- Prepare to respond
7Rhetoric helps writers
revisers
- Identify their own purposes
- Join a conversational dance
- Anticipate reader needs and responses
- Plan written elements for maximum rhetorical
effect
8Lamotts SFDs
- Very few writersgo about their business feeling
dewy and thrilled,bounding along like huskies
across the snow. - Id obsess about getting creamed by a car before
I could write a decent second draft.
9SFDs
- I would eventually let myself trust the
processmore or less.(Lamott) - Writers may need SFDs
- To avoid writing block, lower your
standards. (Stafford) - SFD writers need revision moxy
- Rhetorical heuristics may help
10Heuristics Do I want
- Judicial, deliberative, epideictic?
- Irony, paradox, hyperbole?
- Narrative, refutation, confirmation?
- Appeal to ethos, logos, pathos?
- Definition, evaluation, causality, policy?
(stases) - Five-paragraph essay?
11Rhetoric as MovesJoseph Harris, Rewriting
- Coming to terms with a work
- Forwarding your/others projects
- Whats next?
- Countering your/others moves
- What else?
- Taking an approach in/from your/others writing
12Re-Vision A Dynamic, Rhetorical Task
- Text See the caterpillar, imagine the butterfly
(J. Bean) - Read the text through the audiences eyes
(greedy readers) - See what you say, learn what you think, create
what you know
13Rhetoric for Re-vision
- Kind of argument?
- Appeals, tropes?
- Come to terms?
- Forwarding (next)?
- Countering (else)?
- Audience needs?
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14If You Think,You Can Revise
15Brandon
Janette
Melissa
Rhetoric Induce actions in audience Genre Play
to expectations to induce actions in a
particular, repeated scene--a shortcut, a
de-random-izer
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ine, and http//mediaonsugar.com,
16Genre
- The typical rhetorical ways of responding to a
repeated textual situation (Devitt et al.) - Reflects and preserves the habits of the
community - Tango, hip-hop, waltz, two-step, ballet, Broadway
- Moves, appearances, interactions
17Textual genre diversity
- What genres can you think of?
18Genre-shift Exercise
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19Genres
- Are rhetorical, dynamic, audience-focused systems
(not forms!) - Create as well as represent knowledge
- Help revisers generate content as well as form
20Revisers use genres
- To name/choose what a text is or is not doing
(genreaction) - To imagine audiences (re)actions and needs, and
meet them - To decide how/when to surprise an audience
21Discipline
22Brandon
Janette
Melissa
Rhetoric Induce actions in audience Discipline
The knowledge and conventions that enable and
control inquiry, performance, and discussion
related to a particular subject
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ine, and http//mediaonsugar.com
23Writers in a discipline
- Attend to questions and issues
- Select and analyze evidence
- Include perspectives and theories
- Employ genres and styles
- Use terminologies
- that are appropriate to the
- subject and audience in the field
24Writing in Lit. Studies
- Defines a problem in relation to text, culture,
lens, conversation - Uses art analysis as evidence
- Attends to the writers stance (post-New
Criticism) - Focuses on essays
- Employs precise analytical language insider
terminology
25Exploring v. Solving
- Contradictions Indeterminacies
- Complexities Difficulties
- Multiple, non-overlapping, non-sequential
readings of a text less communal/generalizable
than scientific problem-solving - Joining (bettering) the conversation
- MacDonald, Problem Definition in Academic
Writing College English 49.3 - Salvatori and Donohue, The Elements and
Pleasures of Difficulty - Frey, Beyond Literary Darwinism Womens Voices
and Critical Discourse. College English 52
(1990) 507-26
26Seeing disciplinary moves
- Problem
- Evidence
- Perspective
- Conversation
- Theories/terms
- Structure
- Genre
- Style
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27Revising via discipline
- Refine/expand the problem (thesis, argument,
contribution) - Provide appropriate sufficient evidence
- Attend to the conversation
- Consider theories, lenses, stances
- Observe genre, style, diction
28Rhetorical revising redux
- What does my audience know?
- What does my audience expect?
- What will affect/persuade my audience? How can I
get inside? - How will I and my audience move through my (our)
performance? - How will I adapt to the next audience?
29Finale
- When you think rhetorically, you can revise
deliberately, by choice - When you believe you can revise, you can write
SFDs - When you can write SFDs, you can try something,
take risks - When you take risks, you cangrow as a reader,
writer, rhetor
30Rhetoric, Genre, DisciplineWhen You Think,You
Can Revise