Franklin addresses her audience in first person in paragraph 3,
"I would like to thank everyone involved in this conference, and the organizers in particular, for inviting me to deliver this talk. I am very obviously an outsider and wish to come to this group to talk about something that is central to all work that you people are doing."
Franklin addresses her audience personally. She speaks to them about something not necessarily of her interest but of the audience's interest. Her audience is perhaps mature but may have some people that English may not be a language the understand, therefore by emphasizing very drastically on the important words in her essay by saying them frequently. It is a psychological tact that the more times you repeat a word the better the chance there is of the audience remembering it.
In paragraph 4, Franklin uses repetition to emphasize sound and its sources. She uses "s" sounds throughout the whole passage to imbed the sounds into her audiences mind. The use of alliteration can first be seen in the title "Silence and the Notion of the Commons", the sound that standout are the "S" sounds of Silence and in Commons. This idea is used in paragraph 4 by the repetition of sound and source that is then incorporated into soundscape and landscape. She also uses the