Hampton Sides’ use of rhetorical devices in the book The Kingdom of Ice: The Grand and Terrible Polar Voyage of the USS Jeannette establishes the contrasting tone of the dreary location the ship is in to the optimistic, celebratory tone the men on the ship possess. Sides uses grim diction such as “trapped” and “beyond” (Sides 357) to reveal how the ship has no hope in moving in the frozen ice. He explicitly states “sixteen months” and “thirteen hundred miles” (Sides 357) to emphasize how long these men have been stuck in the ice, unable to move even a foot. The author follows with contrasting syntax by including opposites in multiple sentences: “Though coal supply had dwindled alarmingly, the ship remained snug and warm” and “A few dogs had…
Memorist, Debra Marquart,recalls what it was like growing up in North Dakota in her meir The Horizontal Winds. Marquart’s purpose is to characterize the Midwest as the opposite character that T.V has made North Dakota out to be. She use exaggerated diction to importune a humorous tone in her audience, the readers of the memoir and anyone who has had a false view on what North Dakota is really like.…
Mel Williams I want to know your response (or anyone's response) to all the negative things I hear about him.…
In the book “The Adventures of Tom Sawyer” the author, Mark Twain, is trying to convey a general message that to promise not to do a thing is a best way to make someone do it, and Tom Sawyer does a great job at taking advantage of gullible people and doing such. We see this happen when Tom has to whitewash a fence as a punishment and is pretending to have fun to make the other children jealous.…
Context: Thomas C. Foster addresses to the audience that the actual act of sharing a meal means so much more than what it seems to represent. He goes into different stories in literature when there’s a meal going on or a get-together if you will. Without even having a conversation, through the descriptive phrases used by distinct authors, one can utterly unfold what the author is trying to discreetly tell. It’s one of those tools that in order for the reader to comprehend what’s being indirectly portrayed, he/she must be able to “catch the little detail”.…
Thompson uses inductive reasoning throughout his essay to make a convincing argument about the way people shop. He starts his article with an example of how markets trick people into thinking “33% extra coffee” is the same deal as “33% off the regular price” and more people will go with the “33% extra coffee” because “Getting something extra "for free" feels better than getting the same for less.”. this is the way a human brain work when shopping because we don’t know the true value of what we are purchasing so we compare it to what’s next to it or with the value of what the item is being offered with. Thompson uses 11 similar examples to persuade his audience of his argument that people use only what is knowable such as visual clues, triggered…
This rhetorical question is found in the second paragraph of Thoreau's first part to his essay. In this paragraph Thoreau advocates against the American government and lists multiple of its faults for his readers, in order to push his point that the government does not do the job it is assigned to perform. Furthermore, Thoreau also tries to get the reader to come to the conclusion that the country would be better without the government in place. Thoreau places this rhetorical question in the beginning of the paragraph in order to demean the government prior to making his central argument. He essentially takes a swat at the entire government saying that it is nothing but a tradition that is losing its honor.…
The Surfrider Foundation Ocean pollution poses a serious threat to both the planet and human health. The Surfrider Foundation's advertisement confronts this issue directly, using various rhetorical strategies to raise awareness. The advertisement depicts sushi rolls made from plastic bags and is accompanied by the bold statement, "What goes in the ocean goes in you." The imagery portrayed in the advertisement is powerful, as it highlights the consequences of plastic pollution in the ocean. By linking ocean pollution to human consumption, the advertisement effectively captures the seriousness of the issue.…
Humans are composed of default settings that make them self centered and unaware. After college, the idea of how to learn begins with seeing the bigger picture and paying attention to what is important in life. Wallace introduces his credibility by appealing to the audience through his personal narratives, appealing to the reader’s emotions of fear towards what their lives could potentially become, and using a logical appeal to compare the cause and effect of the way people think; however his use of personal experiences undermines his logical appeal, lacking statistics and valuable research.…
Where does my generation find success? In goals. In my generation is common to see people around my age to want success based on goals they see on pictures from other people's life. In my opinion that's good and not good considering that everyone has similar goals like wanting to have a job or wanting to get married to have a nice house and a lot of money. The goals my generation wants are the same but a little different. For example, let's say that someone posted a picture on social media such as instagram, facebook, twitter, tumblr, the list goes on. The point is what the picture is about, it could be about someone eating ice cream and this people will literally make it an ice cream goal which in my opinion is ridiculous for the reason that you should have your own likes and not what someone else likes.…
Delivered in twenty-three minutes, David Foster Wallace's 2005 commencement speech at Kenyon College had an audience of a few hundred. However, in the years which followed, the transcription of Wallace's speech became an internet phenomenon, coursing through millions of email boxes and introducing the writer to people unfamiliar with his complex fiction. "Thanks to the enthusiasm" of people who knew nothing about Wallace's work, and the "magic of the cut-and-paste function," Tom Bissell remarks that the address likely ranks "high among the most widely read things Wallace ever wrote." But perhaps the most significant testament to the speech's popularity is that the short speech would eventually become a book in its own right. In the year after Wallace's passing, the "Transcription of the 2005 Kenyon Commencement Address" became This Is Water: Some Thoughts, Delivered on a Significant Occasion, about Living a Compassionate Life (2009). And yet, even as Little, Brown's publication of the lecture gave the speech permanence and stability, it also aroused significant debate about whether the form of this publication worked with or against the speech's message. In examining the remediation of Wallace's speech, I suggest that the debate refracts core concerns that Wallace addresses. In the beginning of his address to 2005's graduating class at Kenyon college, David Foster Wallace begins with a parable: "There are these two young fish swimming along, and they happen to meet an older fish swimming the other way, who nods at them and says, "Morning, boys, how's the water?" And the two young fish swim on for a bit, and then eventually one of them looks over at the other and goes, "What the hell is water?" Demonstrating a self-reflexivity that marks all of his fiction, he follows up that this anecdote follows a standard convention of the "bullshitty" commencement speech genre, and that he is not going to presume the role of the "wise old fish" that tells the younger ones what…
I agree with Tim Urban’s message, Gen Y are unhappy people, and the way he set it up makes perfect sense by giving us an equation and the explanation, “When the reality of someone’s life is better than they had expected, they’re happy. When reality turns out to be worse than the expectation, they’re unhappy” (Urban 6). We Gen Y’s have set our expectations so high that it seems kind of impossible to reach. Alexa Tanney said that when children were asked what job they wanted at career day the answers were ridiculous, “kids in my class lined up to be presidents or astronauts, and one kid said he wanted to be the one who made pigs actually fly” (Tanney 4). These children were setting themselves up for failure, not everyone can become president and once they realize that they will be unhappy with their lives.…
David Foster Wallace writes “This is Water” to express to college seniors that everyone has a choice of the way he or she thinks. In this essay, Wallace shows how college seniors have a default setting of the way a person’s mind functions. He then use examples of his credibility or ethos, pathos which he expresses an emotional appeal to the audience, and logos. Wallace creates an argument by using all three examples to support his statements being made in his essay.…
Our society is becoming more individualistic, which makes young generation pay more attention to themselves, but they, especially university students, still contribute a lot to our society.…
We could possibly be the most self-centered generation in American history. This generation can be defined by the people who use social media to constantly share the importance of themselves with others. Dean Obeidallah, a former attorney, uses social media, logical reasoning, history, & current events to defend his argument that being self-centered can be used to create positive outcomes.…