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RHETORICAL STRATEGIES

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Title: RHETORICAL STRATEGIES


1
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • REVIEW

2
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • I. DESCRIPTION

3
I. DESCRIPTION
  • Relies upon SENSE DETAILS
  • Sights
  • Sounds
  • Smells
  • Tastes
  • Touches (tactile impressions)

4
I. DESCRIPTION
  • And FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE
  • Describing the unknown by way of the known
  • Similes
  • Using like or as
  • Metaphors
  • Using or implying is
  • She had black wires for hair.
  • Her eyes were as black as a sharks.
  • Her nose was a ski slope.
  • She had a mouth like a trash compactor.

5
I. DESCRIPTION
  • And PROPER DICTION
  • Keen, discriminating word choice
  • The right words (descriptive)
  • adjectives, adverbs
  • to modify ordinary, plain words
  • nouns, verbs
  • the exact word, technical term, vocabulary
  • Sometimes a heart just beats
  • But often, more descriptive words can be utilized
    to help you make your point -
  • Beats quickly, very fast, irregularly
  • Pounds, throbs, drums, flutters, dances

6
I. DESCRIPTION
  • To support a DOMINANT IMPRESSION
  • The atmosphere, setting
  • A unifying impression or controlling aspect
  • Links all of your sense details
  • The first adjective that comes to mind when you
    think about a particular place, object, person,
    or event

7
I. DESCRIPTION
  • Details are arranged SPATIALLY
  • By space
  • (as opposed to chronology, reason, logic, or
    emphasis)
  • Left to right or right to left
  • Top to bottom or bottom to top
  • To pan, as with a camera

8
I. DESCRIPTION
  • On the Job
  • Reports of all kinds
  • Medical reports
  • Police reports
  • Accident reports
  • Business reports
  • Journalists or Reporters article
  • Product description
  • Construction site details
  • Chemistry or Biology labs

9
I. DESCRIPTION
  • In Argument
  • To help prove your claim
  • To help persuade or convince
  • Topic abortion
  • for
  • Describe the living conditions of the unwanted
    child of a drug-addicted mother
  • against
  • Describe the surgical procedure
  • Suction Aspiration or Dilation and Curettage

10
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • II. NARRATION

11
II. NARRATION
  • Relies upon STORY ELEMENTS
  • Plot
  • Characterization
  • Theme
  • Setting

12
II. NARRATION
  • And DESCRIPTIVE ELEMENTS
  • Sense Details
  • Figurative Language
  • Diction
  • Dominant Impression (related to theme)

13
II. NARRATION
  • To relate a STORY
  • Narrative
  • Account, chronicle
  • Tale, myth, legend

14
II. NARRATION
  • With a MORAL
  • Message
  • Point
  • Meaning
  • Theme

15
II. NARRATION
  • Details are arranged CHRONOLOGICALLY
  • By TIME
  • (as opposed to space, reason, logic, or emphasis)
  • Beginning, Middle, End
  • Linear progression
  • No flashbacks, no circling, no juxtaposition

16
II. NARRATION
  • On the Job
  • Recording witness testimony
  • Lab reports
  • Experiment notes
  • Journalistic accounts
  • Workmans Compensation Accident reports
  • Meeting minutes
  • Troubleshooting explanation

17
II. NARRATION
  • In Argument
  • To help prove your claim
  • To help persuade or convince
  • Narration as evidence
  • Eye-witness or expert testimony
  • Lab reports
  • Journalistic accounts
  • Historic accounts
  • Topic Depression
  • Case studies
  • Your personal account with the disease

18
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • III. ILLUSTRATION

19
III. ILLUSTRATION
  • Employs various means of EVIDENCE
  • EXAMPLES
  • Clear, unambiguous, unequivocal
  • Relevant, topical, warranted, applicable
  • concrete and specific details
  • statistics, facts, figures
  • specific people, places, objects
  • anecdotes
  • brief informative stories to help develop ideas
  • like instances or occurrences

20
III. ILLUSTRATION
  • To support a SPECIFIC CLAIM
  • Argument
  • Point
  • Issue
  • Thesis

21
III. ILLUSTRATION
  • That is clearly stated in the
  • THESIS STATEMENT
  • Clear, emphatic
  • Argumentative
  • Topic Main Idea Support
  • Located at the end of the Introduction

22
III. ILLUSTRATION
  • Evidence arranged EMPHATICALLY
  • Save the best for last
  • Most common, important, significant,
    demonstrative
  • By reason, logic, or emphasis
  • (as opposed to chronology, space)
  • Build emphasis
  • Move toward climax

23
III. ILLUSTRATION
  • Persuasive
  • When done correctly
  • Not overtly persuasive

24
III. ILLUSTRATION
  • On the Job
  • Case studies
  • Demographic statistics
  • Graphs, charts, tables, figures
  • Product specifications
  • Crime scene details
  • Legal precedents, case law
  • Recommendations from past customers or employers

25
III. ILLUSTRATION
  • In Argument
  • To help prove your claim
  • To help persuade or convince
  • Illustration as evidence
  • EXAMPLES
  • Clear, unambiguous, unequivocal
  • Relevant, topical, warranted, applicable
  • Illustrative narrative (anecdote)
  • concrete and specific details
  • statistics, facts, figures
  • specific people, places, objects

26
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • IV. DIVISION and CLASSIFICATION

27
IV. DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION
  • DIVISION divides a topic into
  • Roles
  • Subgroups
  • Subdivisions
  • 1 into many

28
IV. DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION
  • CLASSIFICATION groups into
  • Types
  • Groups
  • Classifications
  • Classes
  • Categories
  • many into 1

29
IV. DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION
  • Each uses EXAMPLES to support the division or
    classification
  • Specific people
  • Specific instances or events
  • Uses clear, relevant, effective/telling, and
    specific examples/instances (for example),
    details, and anecdotes to illustrate the
    characteristics of each type/part

30
IV. DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION
  • Sets up each example with an appropriate
    TRANSITIONS
  • For instance
  • For example

31
IV. DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION
  • Paragraph topics are arranged EMPHATICALLY
  • Save the best for last
  • Most common, important, significant,
    demonstrative
  • By reason, logic, or emphasis
  • (as opposed to chronology, space)
  • Build emphasis
  • Move toward climax

32
IV. DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION
  • On the Job
  • King Philip Came Over For Good Spaghetti
  • Customer analysis (personality types)
  • Sales floor organization
  • Video store classification
  • Understanding the functions of various parts of
    complex systems
  • Computers
  • Transmissions
  • Resume, Job Search

33
IV. DIVISION-CLASSIFICATION
  • In Argument
  • To help prove your claim
  • To help persuade or convince
  • To help understand the problem, issue, situation
  • D/C as evidence
  • Types and sub-groups, roles
  • Each supported with specific examples
  • Types of slavery, abortions, stem cells
  • Crucial roles played by immigrant workers

34
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • V. COMPARISON and CONTRAST

35
V. COMPARISON CONTRAST
  • Employs various means of EVIDENCE
  • EXAMPLES
  • Clear, unambiguous, unequivocal
  • Relevant, topical, warranted, applicable
  • concrete and specific details
  • statistics, facts, figures
  • specific people, places, objects
  • anecdotes (brief informative stories to help
    develop ideas like instances or occurrences)

36
V. COMPARISON CONTRAST
  • To compare OR contrast TWO subjects
  • Only 2 subjects
  • 2 subjects from the same class or category
  • 2 subjects clearly identified in the Introduction
  • 2 subjects compared or contrasted not both

37
V. COMPARISON CONTRAST
  • Points of comparison or contrast are clearly
    stated in the THESIS STATEMENT
  • Topic Main Idea Support
  • support similarities or differences
  • Located at the end of the Introduction

38
V. COMPARISON CONTRAST
  • Writer effectively and strategically employs one
    of two ORGANIZATIONAL METHODS
  • point-by-point-by-point method
  • subject-by-subject method

39
V. COMPARISON CONTRAST
  • Writer uses appropriate TRANSITIONS to guide the
    reader through the text
  • (comparison)
  • also, like, as, furthermore, additionally
  • (contrast)
  • on the other hand, on the contrary, conversely,
    however

40
V. COMPARISON CONTRAST
  • Writer EMPHATICALLY arranges evidence
  • Save the best for last
  • Most common, important, significant,
    demonstrative
  • By reason, logic, or emphasis
  • (as opposed to chronology, space)
  • Build emphasis
  • Move toward climax

41
V. COMPARISON CONTRAST
  • On the Job
  • Job searches
  • Hiring, Firing, or Promoting
  • Product choices
  • Software, hardware
  • Tools, equipment
  • Storage, disposal, recycling
  • Experiments
  • Medications
  • Treatment regimens
  • Exercise, therapeutic, medicinal

42
V. COMPARISON CONTRAST
  • In Argument
  • To help prove your claim
  • To help persuade or convince
  • Topic Stem Cell Research
  • Compare cloned liver to natural one
  • Contrast embryonic to adult SCR
  • Topic Global Warming
  • Compare current Global Warming fad to past Global
    Cooling vogue
  • Contrast current conditions with 50 years ago

43
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • VI. DEFINITION

44
VI. DEFINITION
  • Employs various means of EVIDENCE
  • EXAMPLES
  • Clear, unambiguous, unequivocal
  • Relevant, topical, warranted, applicable
  • concrete and specific details
  • statistics, facts, figures
  • specific people, places, objects
  • anecdotes
  • brief informative stories to help develop ideas
  • like instances or occurrences

45
VI. DEFINITION
  • To support a PERSONAL UNDERSTANDING of a TERM
  • Not a text book definition
  • Not a dictionary or encyclopedia definition
  • But a personal definition

46
VI. DEFINITION
  • That is clearly stated in the
  • THESIS STATEMENT
  • Thesis Definition
  • Clear, emphatic
  • Located at the end of the Introduction
  • Topic Main Idea Support
  • Term Class Traits (characteristics,
    attributes)

47
VI. DEFINITION
  • Evidence arranged EMPHATICALLY
  • Save the best for last
  • Most common, important, significant,
    demonstrative
  • By reason, logic, or emphasis
  • (as opposed to chronology, space)
  • Build emphasis
  • Move toward climax

48
VI. DEFINITION
  • On the Job
  • Job definitions, postings, searches
  • Technical terms
  • Movements, genres, techniques
  • Medical conditions, diseases, treatments
  • Tools, parts, functions
  • Ideas, ideologies, philosophies
  • Laws, legal terms

49
VI. DEFINITION
  • In Argument
  • To help prove your claim
  • To help persuade or convince
  • Topic Racism (attitudes, language)
  • See Langston Hughes Black
  • Topic Same-Sex Marriage
  • Define marriage
  • How its defined side of the issue
  • for couple based on love, commitment
  • against 1 man 1 woman, for procreation

50
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • VII. ARGUMENT and PERSUASION

51
VII. ARGUMENT-PERSUASION
  • PERSUASION
  • Persuasion is the communication of a particular
    message to a targeted audience for a specific
    occasion to effect a change in the reader(s)
    (Memering 216, emphasis mine).
  • its purpose is to persuade reader to think, act,
    feel, certain way
  • it appeals to reason, emotion, and ethics

52
VII. ARGUMENT-PERSUASION
  • ARGUMENT
  • it appeals to logic/reason primarily
  • it uses emotion ethics as support
  • More objective than subjective persuasion
  • More of a report than a dispute
  • Less about trying to change the reader
  • More about trying to inform the reader
  • this is the type of essay you will be writing

53
VII. ARGUMENT-PERSUASION
  • Employs various means of EVIDENCE
  • EXAMPLES
  • Clear, unambiguous, unequivocal
  • Relevant, topical, warranted, applicable
  • concrete and specific details
  • statistics, facts, figures
  • specific people, places, objects
  • anecdotes
  • brief informative stories to help develop ideas
  • like instances or occurrences

54
VII. ARGUMENT-PERSUASION
  • Evidence arranged EMPHATICALLY
  • Save the best for last
  • Most common, important, significant,
    demonstrative
  • By reason, logic, or emphasis
  • (as opposed to chronology, space)
  • Build emphasis
  • Move toward climax

55
VII. ARGUMENT-PERSUASION
  • PURSUASIVE APPEALS
  • LOGOS
  • Logic
  • Examples, stats, facts, reports, expert testimony
  • PATHOS
  • Emotional
  • Fear, guilt, sympathy, (emotional evidence)
  • ETHOS
  • Writers Credibility
  • Tone, proper use of Logos Pathos

56
VII. ARGUMENT-PERSUASION
  • On the Job
  • Job searches
  • Hiring, Firing, or Promoting
  • Product choices
  • Policy recommendations
  • Suggesting changes
  • Buying, selling, advertising
  • Conclusions, recommendations, suggestions
  • Proposals, bids, applications, pitches

57
VII. ARGUMENT-PERSUASION
  • In Argument
  • To help prove your claim
  • To help persuade or convince
  • Any Rhetorical Strategy can be employed to
    achieve your goals, objectives
  • Topic Smoking in Public Places
  • D describe the stench, stains, coughs, lungs
  • N relate personal instance at a restaurant
  • EX stats, anecdotes of secondhand smoke
  • D/C types of smokers, cancers, customers
  • C/C before after smoking ban
  • DFN smoking, public places, rights, privileges

58
RHETORICAL STRATEGIES
  • END of the REVIEW
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