"Pentadic rhetorical criticism" Essays and Research Papers

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    Chris Porter ENG 105-14 January 29‚ 2012 Rhetorical Analysis Spandex is No Good! In the essay‚ “What You Eat is Your Business”‚ Radley Balko writes to tell his audience about how the government is trying to control people’s health and eating habits by restricting food‚ taxing high calorie food‚ and considering menu labeling. Balko includes in his essay that government restricting diets and having socialist insurance is not helping the obesity problem‚ but it is only making it worse

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    personified the ideals of the rest of the country. Through the logical use of word repetition‚ appeal to the exigence that voters face‚ and embodiment of the American Dream commonplace the John F. Kennedy for President 1960 Campaign Ad correctly uses Rhetorical techniques and proves to Americans why JFK would be the best president. The booming repetition

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    In the article‚ “Miss G: A Case Of Internet Addiction‚” New York Times writer Virginia Heffernan addresses the issue of Internet addiction. Heffernan’s purpose is to inform her readers that an Internet addiction might not apply to those who use the Internet for good. She uses authoritative figures and proves her research. She adopts an objective tone in order to prove to Internet users that Internet addiction is not always the case. Heffernan’s tone throughout the article is very objective. Heffernan

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    Literary Criticism: Oedipus the King The pursuit of knowledge was very critical to the Greeks. Even if the truth was terrifying and hard to grasp‚ they saw it as an important virtue. The theater served as a medium for the examining of these ideas of knowledge and truth. Many playwrights at the time used the self-realizations of their protagonists as underlying themes for their tragedies. For example‚ in Oedipus the King.  Sophocles uses Oedipus’s transformation‚ along with the plot‚ to emphasize

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    A set of interrelated‚ interactive messages generated during public discussion of environmental issues; “textual carnival”. Some of the rhetorical characteristics and activities of environet include: reflexive thinking‚ noticing‚ inventing‚ producing‚ and disseminating texts‚ arguing‚ and directing future discourse and action. 2. antagonism (define‚ give example) Antagonism is the limit of an idea‚ a widely shared viewpoint‚ or ideology. This allows an opposing idea to be voiced. Cox uses

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    Writers often use social criticism in their books to show corruptness or weak points of a group in society. One way of doing this is allegory which is a story in which figures and actions are symbols of general truths. George Orwell is an example of an author who uses allegory to show a social criticism effectively. As in his novel Animal Farm‚ Orwell makes a parody of Soviet Communism as demonstrated by Animal Farm’s brutal totalitarian rule‚ manipulated and exploited working class‚ and the pigs’

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    Rhetorical analysis of “Bitch” Beverly Gross’s "Bitch" first appeared in the Salmagundi‚ a humanities and social sciences-based magazine in 1994. In this essay Gross mainly discussed about the meaning of the word “Bitch” changed across time. She analyzed the word in different perceptive‚ its offensive meaning‚ its contemptuous meaning and its literal meaning. As the meaning of the word “Bitch” is changing over time‚ it actually represents the women’s roles in the society is changing as well. Gross

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    Neil Boris Dr. Coyle Engl-101E 19 Sept. 2014 Rhetorical Analysis of “A Guerilla Gardener in South Central L.A.” In South Central‚ Los Angeles‚ there is a food epidemic taking place among the population. For miles and miles‚ the only easily attainable food source is fast food; causing the overconsumption of un-nutritious‚ greasy‚ and fattening food. This is the problem brought to the public’s attention by speaker Ron Finley in his Ted Talks speech‚ “A Guerilla Gardener in South Central L.A.” Finley

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    The American Scholar audience includes‚ Company’s ‚ Employees‚ Educators‚ Students‚ CEO’s‚ and many others. Author Mike Rose questions assumptions about intelligence‚ work and the social class. In the article‚ Rose uses Audience‚ Purpose‚ and Rhetorical Strategies to help the reader form an opinion on intelligence. Throughout the article‚ Rose uses ethos to establish credibility and reveal his purpose. He establishes his credibility by using the personal experiences of blue-collar workers that

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    Rhetorical Analysis Laurie Schutza’s essay‚ “The Pack Rat Among Us” gives the readers a view of what a hoarder is like physically and mentally. A hoarder is a person who gets too attached to personal items that he/she cannot get rid of over the course of their lifetime. This causes the hoarders to have stacks of random things that must people would have disposed of. “Hoarders tend to keep what many may consider useless items such as empty food containers or cardboard boxes” (Schutza 306).

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