Preview

Rhetorical Reading

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
1052 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Rhetorical Reading
Joshua Stonehocker
Steven Gibson
English 1010 046
March 28th, 2005

Rhetorical Reading Essay(Revision)

Since they started pouring the concrete for the dam Lake Powell has been a center of controversy. From nature preservationists to ancient ruins advocates the subject has been heated and intense. On the other hand, those who support Lake Powell are just as avid and active in their defense of the reservoir. One of the former, Edward Abbey, sets forth his plea, hoping it does not fall upon deaf ears. Abbey attempts in his article to help the reader visualize Glen Canyon before it was dammed up. He uses a lot of pathos to help the reader "feel" the beauty of the previous Glen Canyon and the ugliness of the present. His article seems to be written not to the supporters of Lake Powell, but to those who side with Abbey, perhaps in an attempt to strengthen their resolve to do something about their beliefs. Abbey advocates the draining and naturalizing of the reservoir, allowing it to regress back to its natural state. Although the author is very talented at using connotations and figurative language, he focuses too much on pathos and a 20th century view of nature and lacks sufficient logos and ethos. This essay while very passionate is poorly done. The author, Edward Abbey, admits that he is a "butterfly chaser, googly eyed bleeding heart and wild conservative"(Abbey, 144). His constant appeals to nostalgia and tree hugging are repetitive and long-winded. However, as mentioned above, he is an expert in figurative language and connotation. Right from the beginning Abbey uses a great metaphor comparing Glen Canyon to the living heart of the canyon lands, and throws in another about the Colorado River being golden. He tries to form a beautiful picture of what Glen Canyon used to be like by sharing an experience that he and a buddy had almost 50 years ago. Although picturesque and ideal, we all understand that change is a natural part of both

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    This is why the sightseer cannot see the Grand Canyon it for what it is. Rather, when the sightseer goes to visit the canyon, already he is expecting to see certain aspects of the canyon that he has seen in picture postcards, geography book, tourist folders, and the like. He is not delighted or amused from "a progressive discovery of depths, patterns, colors, shadows, etc." but "measures his satisfaction by the degree to which the canyon conforms to the preformed complex". His need to preserve the "memory" of the canyon disallows him to fully appreciate the…

    • 963 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    In "Rhetorical Reading Strategies and the Construction of Meaning" by Christina Haas and Linda Flower, the authors tells us in reading we should have strategies. The two main strategies they elaborate through out the passage are literary theory and cognitive research. Both take a huge part while reading to have a better understanding. As Haas and Flower say "'Critical reading' involves more than careful reading for content, more than identification of conventional features of discourse, such as introduction or examples, and more than simple evaluation based on agreeing or disagreeing"(170). That's why these strategies come in place, a good reader should be able to identify the topic sentence, supporting points, and conclusion. Students lack…

    • 167 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    I sat down on the park bench by the Mirror Lake that was closest to the fountain. Even though nobody was sitting on the seven foot long bench, I sat on one corner occupying the minimum amount of space possible. Only after sitting on the wooden bench I realize that the bench was still slightly wet from previous night’s heavy rain. Though autumn had stripped away the youthful leaves of deciduous trees around the lake, it brought a strange nostalgic beauty to the campus. Dry and crispy fallen leaves ranging from yellow to crimson colors carpeted the cemented bank of the lake. Despite what the name suggests, the Mirror Lake did not reflect its surroundings in the green algae-filled water. However, the serene view of the lake was enough for me to catch a breath and eat lunch between my intensive science classes.…

    • 467 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Rhetorical Analysis

    • 1023 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Sometimes life gets tough and gives us obstacles and challenges just to see how we overcome them. It only takes one mistake for someone’s life to be turned upside down. Watching people go through hardships and life challenges helps us get on the right path and succeed. The book The Other Wes Moore written by Wes Moore himself, is based on real life challenges that two boys ironically with the same name and hometown were faced with and how their decisions on overcoming them lead them to two completely different places. One living free and being able to experience things and the other living unfortunately behind bars. Wes Moore uses the rhetorical appeals ethos, logos, and pathos to engage the readers attention on how two boys with so many similarities can grow up and live two completely opposite lives.…

    • 1023 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    The Three Gorges Dam

    • 423 Words
    • 2 Pages

    2. How does the Three Gorges Dam relate to the issue of global warming, biodiversity, and water pollution discussed in this chapter?…

    • 423 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Edward Abbey uses his non-fiction Desert Solitaire as a sort-of sounding board for his “philosophical pretensions” (Abbey, 51). He shoehorns all manner of (sometimes divergent) ideas into his prose about the landscape and history of the southwest. It’s a wonderful thing, really, to be wrapped up into some story of his then, in a single paragraph, he reveals something about his soul before continuing on with the story as if nothing happened at all. Occasionally though, the seemingly tangental is in fact the critically important for understanding what he is actually saying in his work. Indeed, Abbey’s understanding of Man’s relationship to Nature is incredibly complex, but it is most easily elucidated, at least in part, by pressing on his understanding of the pitfalls of anthropomorphisation.…

    • 692 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    It was hard work, but I loved the feeling of discovering the perfect spot for an interview at the Marin County Civic Center, and I enjoyed sitting with my laptop, rewatching the same five-second sequence of a Marin Municipal Water District employee describing water-saving incentives, getting the perfect pacing of cuts. Reading articles about the California drought, and watching multiple “DIY Greywater Tutorial,” videos, was captivating. But when it came time to present I was nervous. The chatter of the classroom continued as I loaded the video in front of my twenty-eight distracted classmates. It was sunny out, and the lure of summer was making my peers restless. My goal was to earn the attention of the class. I thought about telling my classmates to be quiet. Instead, I pressed the spacebar without saying a word to them. As the camera flew past the Point Bonitas lighthouse and revealed the Golden Gate Bridge, the title appeared: “Grey Area: The Story or Greywater in Marin.” And as the music gradually intensified, the whispers of the AP environmental science class diminished. If you had looked close enough you would have been able to see the red of the Golden Gate bridge reflected on all twenty-eight pairs of eyes in the room. I had their…

    • 643 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Water is known the world over as a fount in which the foundations of life are built upon. It symbolizes freedom. It symbolizes rebirth. It symbolizes purity. Yet, the actuality of water in today’s world does not meet those same criteria. Exploited, polluted, and dammed are often words that come to mind when I look at how the human race manages their water. It is through ironies like this, which show the true extent of damage the Earth faces. Brenda Hillman in her work Practical Water echoes this through her poems concerning the environment and its downfall. In poetry we dwell, but it is impossible to dwell on something whose base is crumbling. Like the polar bear on the lone ice float in the Arctic Ocean, we too now find ourselves desperately…

    • 1512 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    In the nineteenth century, the foundation of American literature had a massive change. This was the change to Romance or Romanticism. The big change was not by one person, but with several people involved. With many contributions of famous writers such as Irving, Cooper, and Bryant composed the stories and poems which all used Romanticism in their own unique ways.…

    • 668 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    Onodaga Lake Pollution

    • 1412 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Today’s society is one that demands easy solutions; however these solutions often come with long term problems which are often overlooked. Today many companies seem to think that it is acceptable to use the environment as an easy solution to the waste they create, but this can cause devastating problems to the environment. These ideas can be found in Joel K. Bourne Junior’s article “The Gulf of Oil” and Karsten Heuer’s “Being Caribou”. A local example of the problems that can be caused by pollution is Onondaga Lake, located just outside of Syracuse which many have called the most polluted lake in America. In order to understand why this happened one must take a look at the lake’s history, the actions of those that were utilizing it, and the results of using the environment as an easy solution.…

    • 1412 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    What Is Grand Canyon?

    • 186 Words
    • 1 Page

    The Grand Canyon’s south rim produces a view that includes an equally wide as it was deep canyon, created by a deep blue green river at the bottom of the feature that had over millions of years cut through multiple layers of varying iron infusion colored rock. Although this view to many individuals led to the to the name Grand Canyon, when looked upon it as for what the landmark really is, a crack in the earth formed by a flowing river, it is not as Grand at all, instead the natural setting in which canyon is part of is the true meaning of Grand.…

    • 186 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Before Didion had even thought of the Dam, how it would someday captivate her so vividly she would never forget its haunting sight, the world thought of it first. It was an idea that sat in the world’s mind for 40 years. The Hoover Dam is a attraction of the Boulder Canyon project. Didion pointed out that the Dam was “fait accompli” an accomplished fact; something that started out as an idea and grew into something bigger. It was now a solid fact that “mankinds greatest promise lay in american engineering.”…

    • 574 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    value of nature

    • 915 Words
    • 4 Pages

    Nature has a life of its own, yet we don’t realize it; in fact we are surrounded by it. Nevertheless we human beings give a blind eye to nature in which we live in, deforestation, pollution, global warming, all of these factors are affecting the nature in which we live in, yet we don’t care, and continue in wrecking it. What is life without nature? Nature is a resort where people of all ages flee to in order to release their tension and keep all the worries of the world behind their back and enjoy the tranquility of nature. Nature, a home in which everyone belongs to. Three readings, “Fish Story,” “River Walking,” “Walking,” written by Rick Bass, Kathleen Dean Moore, and Henry David Thoreau respectively, all talk about nature and their experiences with it, and their are many themes which relate to all three readings, but there is one which is interesting to talk about; a theme in which all the authors of the story have a valuable recreation which allows them to interact with nature, and with each interaction a value of nature can be depicted.…

    • 915 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    River is not just a stream of water flowing into the sea. As an important part of an ecosystem, it is a natural habitat for wildlife and a provider of food and other resources for humans. Furthermore, for communities living by the river, it plays dramatic role in constructing their culture and defines the social life of the community. Therefore, altering river`s natural flow and seasonal patterns can have a dramatic consequences for both the ecosystem as well as river-side communities. During the last hundred years, the world has witnessed catastrophic effects of such a manipulation caused by the construction of dams. From the beginning of the 20th century, dams have been mushrooming on the surface of the planet, turning rivers into lakes, blocking migration paths of the fish, displacing people from their homes and destroying communities. In this essay, I will discuss how a river can be constitutive of a creative movement of social life for riverine people and the effects damming have on their lives. Further, I will emphasize the developments in anti-damming movement that has been happening in recent years, specifically exemplifying the case of Elwha river restoration.…

    • 2243 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Powerful Essays