Preview

Visual Arguments

Satisfactory Essays
Open Document
Open Document
670 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
Visual Arguments
Visual Argument:

Purpose and audience:
In today’s society, images play a large role in defining who we are, in communicating ideas, and in shaping what we think. For instance, controversy surrounded the President using images of the World Trade Center tragedy for purported political gain. The advertisement for drinking more milk (“Got Milk?”) is a popular image, while MTV moved young people toward small visual sound bites. Think about what type of images “speak” to you. Think about what certain images say. Think about how they are designed to elicit a response or draw attention to them (design features).

Then think about what you would like to say with your visual images. What point are you trying to make? What position are you trying to articulate? What is your argument? What image best represents you, your company, your school, your kid’s soccer team, etc?

Remember that argument doesn’t necessarily mean controversy or negative confrontation. Arguments can be positive. Stating a position and advocating that position is something many of us often do. With that in mind, think about what type of visual you would like to represent your company. The only difference is that your argument will come in the form of pictures/images and will be directed to the general public.

Gather Information:
As a pre-writing activity, you should take a tour of the school and gather some data about what the school “says.” If you visited a school (any school), what images would stick with you, what images would “speak” to you, and what would those images say?

Task:
Find 5 images that “talk” about ISU and then:
1. Describe the images
2. Tell what the images say
3. Explain what values are reflected by the images
4. Tell what appeal is present in the images and to whom the appeal is being made – who is the intended audience
Example: imagine a picture of a crowded parking lot. What might the picture say?
1. It might say that lots of students attend this school
2.

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Good Essays

    Explore the ways the images we see and or visualise in texts are created. Students consider how the forms and language of different texts create these images, affect interpretation and shape meaning.…

    • 882 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When I first learned of the visual rhetorical analysis and began to read the accompanying instructions, not going to lie, I was a little worried. My first thought was “how am I supposed to talk, let alone, care enough about an image to write, at a minimum, 1250 words about it.” I mean they do say a picture speaks a 1000 words, but they don’t say anything about 1250. (This was all before we received the updated instructions, which by coincidence or not, changed the word count to 1000.) The next step in my process came when I initially saw the four images which we were presented with as options, and from the first glance I knew exactly the one I was going to write about. I chose the WWF’s representation of lungs and the environment because,…

    • 403 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    words and images are masterfully combined, as shown in image 1. This image is one of…

    • 822 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Good Essays

    Distinctively visual texts are able to manipulate the emotions of the audience to influence the responses of a collective group.…

    • 1138 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    The cartoon that I chose is called Border Security. I find it very interesting that the cartoonist chose this type of background. Also having Border Security, NOT, and Amnesty all highlighted in red. The text in this cartoon is very unique to its time, because of the major focus that has been on border control. I believe that the cartoonist targeted a specific type of reader in this cartoon. That type of reader would be the nave and ignorant people focused on this topic of boarder security and bringing up unreasonable ideas as to why we need more border control and to send them back to their country. I also find it interesting that in this cartoon the Native Americans are talking about border security to each other, about the Europeans, just to find out that the Europeans in the future kill, rape, and steal the Native Americans land and people. To me it looks like the cartoonist is trying to get a point across that we need to take a look at ourselves and what we stand by, or perhaps the cartoon just may be telling us that this is a cycle. When talking about the exigence of this cartoon, the fact that I believe everyone should open their eyes and try to relate toward each other is my main motivation on writing about this topic.…

    • 1201 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Good Essays

    Distinctively visual images which can be seen, or perceived in the mind can shape the responder understanding of relationship with others plus the world around . The use of distinctively visual features has had a positive effect on my understanding of the novel Maestro by Peter Goldsworthy’s and the painting ‘starry starry night’ by Vincent van Gogh. This has been done through distinctively visual features such as descriptive and emotive language in Maestro and the use of colour, shading, lighting and placement in ‘starry starry night’.In saying this, this gives evidence as I do strongly agree with the statement ‘‘The visual image has a significant impact on the way the responder is positioned to react to a text’. This will be seen through…

    • 1241 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    2. Who is the intended audience for this artist’s work? A) Identify three different kinds of viewers (e.g. western viewers – men and women, women of any geographic origin, western women, etc.) and how you identify her target audience.…

    • 961 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    2. What do the images (colors, forms, abstractions) and literary, historical, and/or mythological allusions mean? Identify the figures of speech and thought used. See Web sites about Figures of Speech on the Supplementary Materials page (added 8/21/05).…

    • 787 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Better Essays

    Visual rhetoric is one of the most fundamental concepts in theory and practice of advertising because it encompasses the methodology that has arguably been used by every company over the world in the past decades. Phillips and McQuarrie (2004) argue that visual rhetoric is a fair descendant of verbal rhetoric as it utilizes the same principles and resorts to same conceptual devices as its parent concept. One can come up with dozens of examples of verbal rhetoric where certain objects and phenomena are linked to seemingly irrelevant counterparts through thoughtful presentation of both in an accurately designed context that brings forth their unobvious similarity channels. This is exactly how visual rhetoric works, although some authors admit that contrary to its more commonplace counterpart, visual rhetoric leaves a lot more freedom for imaginative interpretation of advertisement devices (Puntoni, Schroeder and Ritson, 2010). This phenomenon called “polysemy” emerges from the openness of imagery and countless variables that make up people’s backgrounds which affect their perceptive and cognitive characteristics. This essay will examine the key concepts of visual rhetoric in advertising and analyze some advertisements to support to this theory.…

    • 1595 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    flvs bs

    • 415 Words
    • 2 Pages

    When my partner, Laura, and I completed our task, we talked about how a picture can be worth a thousand words. We choose this because in image number one you can only guess what he is thinking about or what’s going on, you can never be completely sure. Therefore the picture is worth a thousand words because there are so many possibilities.…

    • 415 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Chapter ten “ The Global Flow of Visual Culture” discuss the circulation of images and how they have changed over many decades. People now only get their image information through satellites and the more frequently the web. In other words, we now get our information much more faster and in a more advanced way than humans did thirty years ago. Since there are newer ways that images travel through different media sources, there is now more room for people to be able to alter the specific image they’re looking at. People can now use they images to create their own stories and interpretations before taking them and sending them out to other media outlets. The specific tweaking of these images can be strictly negative because it may send off a false…

    • 304 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    The most striking visual elements in each image were intelligent in choosing the angle snapshot, free of amendments and understandable without further explanation needed. All these components made those images the most in supporting of the theme.…

    • 658 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Visual communication is just about everywhere we look. Reflect on the visuals you’ve seen in your daily life over the past couple weeks, and the messages they’ve communicated (e.g., TV commercials, billboards, magazine ads, web ads, websites, product packaging, photographs, etc.). Do any stand out in your mind? If so, why do you think they were so effective in getting your attention? Are there any trends you are noticing specifically in today’s media?…

    • 516 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Tok Persuasion

    • 2361 Words
    • 10 Pages

    Images are often not appealing to reason, but to emotions. This is not to say that a lot of thought does not go into graphical expression, but that the images are all ways aimed at moving the viewer visually. For example a form of visual theatre, burlesque will often attack something by representing it so as to look inane. In this case there is an interpreting process going on, but the audience must necessarily have an emotional response to what they see. Expression through images may have some interpreting process that the audience must make, but the final appeal will rely on our emotions. Another good example is political cartoons. Because political cartoons are able to make some aspect of an event look inane, they appeal to the audiences emotions so that they will adopt a certain political view. In this it relies on the audiences reason to interpret the relationship and consequences represented in the cartoon, but the final result it aims for is a emotional response. But some photos will appeal only to are straight visceral response. For example, the photos asking for charity will usually feature children, which we will naturally feel pity for. In this case the photograph is appealing straight to our pity and natural sympathy towards children. In other cases the appeal may be anger. And beyond that this emotion is often manipulated through association. For example there are, in my opinion, a bit too many images portraying Obama aside Stalin, or other prominent figures in the USSR. This is not reason, but an attempt to stir up a visceral response of hatred and distrust.…

    • 2361 Words
    • 10 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Icse English

    • 1697 Words
    • 7 Pages

    Study the picture given below. Write a story or a description or an account of what it suggests to you. Your composition may be about the subject of the picture or you may take suggestions from it; however, there must be a clear connection between the picture and your composition.…

    • 1697 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Powerful Essays

Related Topics