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Rhetoric

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Title: Rhetoric


1
Rhetoric
  • All you ever wanted to know and more about
    Rhetoric

2
A few Definitions of Rhetoric
  • Rhetoric is the art of winning the soul by
    discourse. Plato
  • Wherever there is persuasion, there is rhetoric,
    and wherever there is rhetoric, there is
    meaning. Kenneth Burke
  • Rhetoric is the art of dressing up some
    unimportant matter so as to fool the audience for
    the time being. Ezra Pound
  • In short, rhetoric is a mode of altering
    reality, not by the direct application of energy
    to objects, but by the creation of discourse
    which changes reality through the mediation of
    thought and action. Lloyd Bitzer

3
In other words
  • Rhetoric is all about giving a name to something
    we already know a great deal about, and teachers
    who understand that are well on their way to
    teaching rhetoric effectively in their classes.

4
  • Rhetoric is all around us in conversations,
    movies, advertisements and books, in body
    language, and in art. We use rhetoric whether
    were conscious of it or not, but becoming
    conscious of how rhetoric works can transform
    speaking, reading, and writing, making us more
    successful and able communicators and more
    discerning audiences.

5

6
Rhetorical Triangle Explanation
  • Aristotle said that when a speaker begins to
    consider how to compose a speech, the speaker
    must take into account three elements
  • The Subject
  • The Audience
  • And the Speaker
  • These three elements are connected and
    interdependent hence, the triangle.

7
Considering Subject
  • The writer/speaker evaluates what he or she knows
    already and needs to know, investigates
    perspectives, and determines kinds of evidence or
    proofs that seem most useful.
  • This is only one factor in the composing process,
    but the one you are most familiar with.

8
Considering Audience
  • This means speculating about the readers
    expectations, knowledge, and disposition with
    regard to the subject writers explore. When
    students respond to an assignment given by a
    teacher, they have the advantage of knowing a bit
    of what their audience expects from them. When
    there is no assignment, writers imagine their
    readers, and if they follow Aristotles
    definition, they will use their own experience
    and observation to help them decide on how to
    communicate with readers.

9
Considering Speaker
  • The use of experience and observation brings us
    to the speaker point of the triangle. Writers
    use who they are, what they know and feel, and
    what theyve seen and done to find their
    attitudes toward a subject and their
    understanding of a reader. Decisions about
    formal or informal language, the use of narrative
    or quotations, the tone of familiarity or
    objectivity, come as a result of writers
    considering their speaking voices on the page.

10
The Rhetorical Transaction
  • According to Aristotle, the rhetorical
    transaction consists of three basic components
    logos, ethos and pathos.

11
What is Logos?
  • A writer/speaker appeals to a readers sense of
    logos, when they offer clear reasonable premises
    and proofs, when they develop ideas with
    appropriate details, and when they make sure
    readers can follow the progression of ideas.
  • The logical thinking that informs speakers
    decisions and readers responses forms a large
    part of the kind of writing students accomplish
    in school.

12
  • Facts
  • Statistics
  • Mathematical proofs
  • Scientific evidence

13
What is Ethos?
  • Writers use ethos when they demonstrate that they
    are credible, good-willed, and knowledgeable
    about their subjects, and when they connect their
    thinking to readers own ethical or moral
    beliefs.

14
  • ReputationCredibilityExpertiseEducationCelebr
    ity

15
What is Pathos?
  • When writers draw on the emotions and interests
    of readers, and highlight them, they use pathos,
    the most powerful appeal and the most immediate-
    hence its dominance in advertisements.
  • Figurative language is often used by writers to
    heighten the emotional connections readers make
    to the subject.

16
  • PridePityJoySympathyMoralityEnvyCompanionshi
    pCamaraderie

17
Why all Equal?
  • The equal sides and angles illustrate the concept
    that each appeal is as important as the others.
    It also suggests that a BALANCE of the three is
    important. Too much of one is likely to produce
    an argument that readers will either find
    unconvincing or that will cause them to stop
    reading.

18
  • All of the areas can potentially affect the
    others. An illogical argument may move us
    emotionally, but only in the sense that it makes
    us feel that the author is relying exclusively on
    emotions rather than offering solid reasoning.
    Finally, if an argument contains only facts and
    figures and no emotional appeals, we may simply
    get bored. All these defect may, in turn, affect
    the authors ethical appeal how can we trust a
    writer who appeals only to our emotions?

19
The Readers Rhetorical Triangle
  • Logos
  • Note the claims the author makes
  • Note the data the author provides in support of
    the claims
  • Note the conclusions the author draws.

20
  • Ethos
  • Note how the author establishes a persona.
  • Note how the author establishes credibility.
  • Note any revelation of the authors credentials
    or personal history.

21
  • Pathos
  • Note the primary audience for the text.
  • Note the emotional appeals the author makes.
  • Note the authors expectations of the audience.

22
The Writers Rhetorical Triangle
  • Logos
  • Have I established the purpose for my text, and
    have I utilized the most effective genre?
  • Have I established a clear, reasonable, and
    logical progression of my ideas?
  • Have I addressed opposing arguments or
    perspectives?

23
  • Ethos
  • Have I established the appropriate persona?
  • Have I established my credibility?
  • Have I expressed my knowledge and expertise of
    the topic?

24
  • Pathos
  • Have I considered the primary audience, the
    background they have?
  • Does my audience agree with me or will I have to
    persuade them of the validity of my argument?
  • How will I make my text appeal to my audience?

25
Expanded Rhetorical Triangle
26
Intention of Rhetoric
  • Rhetoric should be a study of misunderstandings
    and their remedies.
  • I.A. Richards

27
  • Rhetoric is the way to connect intentions with
    responses, the way to reconcile readers and
    writers. Intention is sometimes embodied in a
    thesis statement certainly, students get lots of
    practice making those statements clear. Intention
    is carried out throughout a pieces, and it often
    changes.

28
Rhetorical Modes
  • Following are listed seven rhetorical modes of
    communication.  Some of these you are do doubt
    familiar with. We will not specifically address
    each, but you are expected to be able to
    recognize the form.  Please note that the
    following are not definitions.  They are
    examples.
  • Narration    "I was seven years old when I first
    became aware of the terrible power of guilt.  For
    piling our toys into a box, Mother rewarded my
    brother and me with five shiny pennies.  If I had
    ten pennies instead of five, I could have bought
    a gingerbread man with raisin eyes and
    sugar-frosted hair."

29
  • Description    Never before had Pedro experienced
    such a depth of despair and such a sense of
    isolation.  he began to avoid those nearest to
    him, returning their friendly greetings with
    rough and indifferent replies. Often he sat in
    his room staring vacantly into space with hollow
    eyes.  His hands were cold and clammy most of the
    time yet his forehead burned hot with a
    mysterious fever.
  • Example    Seneca once said, "Every guilty person
    is his own hangman."  The truth of this
    observation can be illustrated by the lives of
    countless villains.  Once such is Macbeth, from
    Shakespeare's tragedy of the same name.  At the
    instigation of his wife, Macbeth kills the king
    of Scotland and usurps his throne - an act of
    treachery for which Macbeth and his wife suffer
    torments of guilt.

30
  • Definition    Guilt is the remorse that comes
    from an awareness of having done something
    wrong.  The origin of guilt is psychological. 
    From childhood, we have all been conditioned by
    family and society to act within defined
    standards of reasonableness and decency.
  • Comparison and Contrast    Although the first two
    words may seem to share some connotations, guilt
    is not a synonym for blame.  Guilt must be felt
    blame must be assessed.  Guilt implies
    self-reproach that comes from an internal
    consciousness of wrong.  Blame hints at fault
    that has been externally assessed.

31
  • Division and Classification    The Bible
    identifies three kinds of guilt  guilt of the
    unpardonable sin, redeemable guilt, and guilt of
    innocence.  First, the guilt of the unpardonable
    sin...Second, redeemable guilt is guilt that can
    be erased...Finally, the guilt of innocence is
    the guilt that Jesus bore...
  • Causal Analysis    Guilt is caused by the failure
    of the will.  The human mind, according to
    Freudian theory, is delicately balanced between
    the drive for instant gratification that comes
    for the id, and the desire for regulation and
    postponement that originates in the superego,
    which is sometimes identified with what we call
    he conscience.

32
Questions for Discussion
  • Can rhetoric be something you have?
  • Can rhetoric be something you do?
  • What makes a piece of writing rhetorical? Is all
    writing rhetorical?How will we read and analyze
    rhetorically? How will we write rhetorically?
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