In a 1,500+word response students will analyze the rhetorical appeals (ethos, pathos, logos) and how these develop the claim and appeal to the intended audience of the student’s selected text (text selections are below).
Geraghty, Jim. “What is the Right Level of Fear for Living during a Pandemic?” nationalreview.com, 24 Aug. 2020, National Review, https://www.nationalreview.com/corner/what-is-the-right level-of-fear-for-living-during-a-pandemic/. Accessed <enter your date>.
Purpose: To demonstrate understanding of how arguments are created through the three appeals and the mechanisms within each that develop the appeal.
Your Primary MOD: Division Analysis—writing that isolates individual writing strategies.
Tone: Objective (no first person or opinions unless in introduction and/or conclusion)
MINIMUM Length: 1,500+ words
Submission Format: MLA; electronic submission to Canvas
Additional Notes: As students of ENGL 1302, your primary goal is to understand how arguments work and, later, to create your own. You’ve taken the first step to achieving this in exploring compositional basics—how writing and a thesis develop and why an author makes the choices he or she does. Now, you will take it to the next level, analyzing how compositional strategies create the appeals and how the appeals, overall, strengthen or weaken the argument.
Basic Structure of an Analytical Response (Rhetorical Analysis)
The Roman numerals below are suggested “movements” in your response and may or may not indicate paragraphs.
I. Introduction: Introductions greet your reader into your response. Students are encouraged to begin with a colorful “hook”—one to three sentences that instantly engage the reader via the topic of the article analyzed and/or the purpose of analysis.
II. Introduction of Article & Context: When analyzing a text, you need to fully introduce it:
III-V. The Body Paragraphs: In the “body paragraphs,” this is where the student dives into theHOW and WHY an appeal is employed by the author. In each “body paragraph” the student needs to:
VI. Conclusion
Conclusions are often taught in essay writing to be a recap of the response. Yet, as you are writing a brief response of 3-5 pages (at most), your reader need not be reminded of what he/she read. Rather, end your analysis on a more poignant and/or personal note. As an ENGL 1302 student, you should constantly be thinking about the persuasive air around you and the direct arguments challenged your way: how do you feel about them?