rhetorical analysis

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RHETORICAL ANALYSIS

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Rhetorical analysis. What is the purpose of rhetorical analysis?. The purpose of rhetorical analysis is to determine how an author uses language to create meaning , develop his or her purpose(s) and/or produce particular effects . Step 1: Deconstruct the prompt. What is the context? - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Rhetorical analysis

Rhetorical analysisWhat is the purpose of rhetorical analysis?The purpose of rhetorical analysis is to determine how an author uses language to create meaning, develop his or her purpose(s) and/or produce particular effects.Step 1: Deconstruct the promptWhat is the context?What is the time period?What is the topic?Who is the author?What is my purpose for analysis?What is the mode of writing?Is there a universal subject present?Writing modes and Rhetorical StrategiesNarrativePoint of viewStructureFigurative devicesDictionExpositoryOrganizationDevelopmentDictionFigurative languageSyntaxWriting modes and Rhetorical StrategiesArgumentAppealsLogicOpposing ViewSyntaxDictionSatireIronyPurposeHyperboleUnderstatementIncongruenceStep 2: read (with a pen)What am I looking for as I read?Authors purpose(s) and overall meaning(s)Use of rhetoricRepetition/parallelism/juxtapositionShifts (tone, organization, idea, focus)Noteworthy dictionFigurative language, symbolismAllusions

CAUTION!Understanding the authors meaning/purpose is ESSENTIAL and the fundamental goal!

Who cares if you can find rhetorical stuff but do not know how it contributes to the meaning of the piece?Step 3: articulate meaningWhat is the purpose of the piece?What is the universal subject?What is this piece really about? What is the abstract nounthe bigger ideaon which this piece is touching?What is the answer to what the prompt is asking me to analyze?What in this passage is affecting this universal subject?Step 4: review the rhetorical strategies you annotatedWhat is the mode of writing?The mode of writing hints to the rhetorical strategies used.Writing modes and Rhetorical StrategiesNarrativePoint of viewStructureFigurative devicesDictionExpositoryOrganizationDevelopmentDictionFigurative languageSyntaxWriting modes and Rhetorical StrategiesArgumentAppealsLogicOpposing ViewSyntaxDictionSatireIronyPurposeHyperboleUnderstatementIncongruenceStep 5: analyzeIf you are talking about what the text says, you are summarizing.If you are talking about how the text makes meaning, you are analyzing.analysis: purposeWhen discussing purpose, consider the following questions:Why does this writer choose this particular strategy to create his or her message?How does the writer use this strategy to make meaning?Why does the writer use this particular strategy and this particular example?analysis: effectWhen discussing effect, consider the following:Because the writer used this rhetorical strategy, how/why does the use influence one or more of the following:SpeakerReaderMessageTonePurposeStep 6: Identify shifts/contrastsSignals of a shift:Transitions (e.g., but, yet, nevertheless, however, although, therefore.)Punctuation (dashes, periods, colons)Paragraph divisionsChanges in sentence length/structureWriting a thesis statementPARTS OF THE THESIS STATEMENTTOPICCLAIM (VERB)DIRECTIONQUALIFIERUNIVERSAL IDEATOPICThe TOPIC reveals the context of the thesisthe text(s) analyzed.Example

Gary Sotos autobiographical essayCLAIM (VERB)The CLAIM explains the texts connection to the rhetorical strategies.For practice, uses is a good place to start.Try synonyms and substitutes for usesExampleGary Sotos autobiographical essay usesDIRECTIONThe DIRECTION tells how the text arrives at the universal idea.DIRECTION = rhetorical strategiesExample

Gary Sotos autobiographical essay uses diction, allusions, and imagery

QUALIFIERThe QUALIFIER links the directions to the purpose of analysis and universal truth.to prove thatTry to choose an academic verb that best describes the what the directions are doing to the purpose of analysis and universal truth.Example:Gary Sotos autobiographical essay uses diction, allusions, and imagery to prove that

UNIVERSAL TRUTHThe UNIVERSAL TRUTH is the larger idea, message, or purpose at work in the text. The UNIVERSAL TRUTH should reveal meaning about the UNIVERSAL SUBJECT (abstract noun).Example:

Gary Sotos autobiographical essay uses diction, allusions, and imagery to prove that guilt seems to haunt those who sin.

GOING TO THE NEXT LEVELAdding Variety and Complexity to a Thesis StatementSTEP 1: MODIFIED DIRECTIONSFor each direction, add an adjective that best describes the texts use of that direction.ExampleGary Sotos autobiographical essay uses simplistic diction, Biblical allusions, and contrasting imagery to prove that guilt seems to haunt those who sin.

STEP 2: ADD THE SHIFT/CONTRASTReveal the shift/contrast that occurs within the text (especially the shift/contrast in the universal idea.ExampleGary Sotos autobiographical essay, in which the focus shifts from innocence to experience, uses simplistic diction, Biblical allusions, and contrasting imagery to prove that guilt seems to haunt those who sin.

STEP 3: ADDING text words/PHRASES FOR INTERESTChoose a few words or phrases from the text that allude to or somehow reinforce the universal idea.Add these words/phrases to the thesis statement for effect.

STEP 3: ADDING text words/PHRASES FOR INTERESTExample

Gary Sotos autobiographical essay, in which he shifts from innocence to experience, uses simplistic diction, Biblical allusions, and contrasting imagery to prove that sweet, gold-colored, sticky guilt seems to haunt those who sin with faraway messages of blame.

STEP 4: RE-ARRANGE THE PIECES!Take all the thesis statement parts, and re-arrange them to create sentence variety.Example:To prove that sweet, gold-colored, sticky guilt seems to haunt those who sin with faraway messages of blame, Gary Sotos autobiographical essay uses simplistic diction, Biblical allusions, and contrasting imagery while shifting the focus from Sotos innocence to experience.Creating Topic SentencesThe Elements of the Topic SentenceTopicDirectionClaimUniversal Idea

* These elements should seem similar to the thesis components (but now with a twist)!Step 1: Begin with a solid thesis.Gary Sotos autobiographical essay, in which he shifts from innocence to experience, uses simplistic diction, Biblical allusions, and contrasting imagery to prove that sweet, gold-colored, sticky guilt seems to haunt those who sin with faraway messages of blame.Step 2: Borrow the Topics from the Thesiss DirectionsThesisGary Sotos autobiographical essay, in which he shifts from innocence to experience, uses simplistic diction, Biblical allusions, and contrasting imagery to prove that sweet, gold-colored, sticky guilt seems to haunt those who sin with faraway messages of blame.

Topic SentenceTopic: Biblical allusions (This is the first direction.)Step 3: Add the Direction(s)The directions of the topic sentence are the examples you will use as evidence.

Sotos Biblical allusions, such as the squirrel nailing itself to the tree and Adam and Eve and the apple, . . .

*Use two directions.Step 4: Add the ClaimChoose an appropriate verb that links what the directions do in relation to the universal idea.

Sotos Biblical allusions, such as the squirrel nailing itself to the tree and Adam and Eve and the apple, underscoreStep 5: Add the Universal Idea (Again)Add the universal idea to the topic sentence.CAUTION: To keep the universal idea from becoming redundant throughout the essay, develop synonyms.

Sotos Biblical allusions, such as the squirrel nailing itself to the tree and Adam and Eve sinning because of the apple, underscore the disgrace associated with sin..Step 6: Write the body paragraphTopic SentenceEvidence (Example) #1CommentaryPurposeEffectEvidence (Example) #2CommentaryPurposeEffectClincher SentenceA note about commentaryIf you are talking about what the text says, you are summarizing.If you are talking about how the text makes meaning, you are analyzing.Commentary: purposeWhen discussing purpose, consider the following questions:Why does this writer choose this particular strategy to create his or her message?How does the writer use this strategy to make meaning?Why does the writer use this particular strategy and this particular example?Commentary: effectWhen discussing effect, consider the following:Because the writer used this rhetorical strategy, how/why does the use influence one or more of the following:SpeakerReaderMessageTonePurpose