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    rhetorical analysis

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    and that horrid practice of women murdering their . . . children”. This evokes an emotional response from those who are against abortion‚ and says‚ “Hey‚ my idea saves kids from this”. He uses ethos when he says‚ “[it] would deserve so well of the public as to have his statute set up for a preserver of the nation”. This makes it seem as though he is just a civil servant‚ trying to make things the best he can for the nation. He seems to be saying‚ “You can trust me”. Finally‚ when he says‚ “I shall

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    Ask Not Some consider the 1961 Inaugural Address of President John F. Kennedy to be one of the greatest speeches ever delivered. It contains the famous call to action “Ask not what your country can do for you – ask what you can do for your country.” Thurston Clark declares the speech to be “the greatest oration of any twentieth-century politician” (qtd in Carpenter 2). James Humes states the speech truly shaped history‚ describing it as “brilliant eloquence” and inspiring “American hopes” for

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    Full Name Instructor Course Name Date Fact? or Fiction? The story “I Just Wanna Be Average”‚ written by Mike Rose offers up a personal account of how a testing mistake early in his high school days could have changed the course of his life for the worse and how these events and those that followed solidified his perception of the educational system as an adult. The author tries to establish credibility by writing in a first-person narrative of his life as a teenager growing up in early 1960s

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    Stanley Kubrick’s 2001: A Space Odyssey is considered one of the most impressive science fiction films in the modern era and is a critically acclaimed masterpiece. To begin this analysis I will first give a synopsis of the films plot and key points to help lay a foundation for the film. The movie is broken into 4 acts‚ each focusing on a different event and time in the story. We first start with “The Dawn of Man”; we are greeted by what appears to be a tribe of early hominids foraging for food in

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    Final draft Khoa(Kay)Dang LLD 100A September 23‚ 2014 Word Count: 1‚983 Rhetorical Analysis Introduction Communication skills are vital to every living thing on Earth. Communication skills have become sophisticated. There are many factors and types in expression; formal‚ informal‚ oral‚ written‚ visual‚ verbal. Sometimes there are other ways to communicate with senses; tasting and touching. Therefore‚ people have been developing

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    January 13th 2012 AP English Rhetorical Analysis Essay #3 Final Draft Every individual has traditions passed down from their ancestors. This is important because it influences how families share their historical background to preserve certain values to teach succeeding generation. N. Scott Momaday has Native American roots inspiring him to write about his indigenous history and Maxine Hong Kingston‚ a first-generation Chinese American who was inspired by the struggles of her emigrant family

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    courage it takes to stand up and state the facts about what they feel and why they feel this way. He begins his argument based on the Clinton/Lewinsky Starr Report. And what he argues is that this most private of information is coming out of the most public of offices (or the most “imperial of bedrooms”). If such private information can be released from what is supposed to be the most private and protected of offices‚ how much easier should it be that it comes out of his unprotected home? This gives

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    reputation and campaign. Obama’s main purpose was to get the audience (potential voters) to be a part of a “more perfect union.” Obama encourages voters to go out and vote for him so we can face this challenge together. Obama welds three distinctive rhetorical tactics to support his overarching argument that unity is compulsory in this country to produce racial equality. First‚ he opens with a personal and historical background to highlight the moment

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    Totalitarian state attempts to control all aspects of its citizens’ lives. Freedom of speech and thought‚ emotions‚ individuality and privacy are scarce commodities under this regime. This must not make sense to the majority‚ yet still we do not rebel. You may well believe the party is managing our society well‚ there is strong evidence that this is not the case. As the party has gained more and more power‚ it has also taken away more and more rights. The issue of freedom of speech and thought

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    The digital world‚ especially its omnipresence and highly structured environment‚ has introduced a new sort of rhetoric which holds a significant effect on identity. Digital rhetoric theory has come about as a result of communication occurring via various electric formats (Plessis 2013 p. 2). The Internet functions as a source which promotes “rethinking of identity as anonymous‚ fluid‚ and unfixed” because of its collaborative nature (Hess 2014 p. 3). Users are always interacting with the readily

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