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The Language of Composition: Introducing Rhetoric: Using the "Available Means"

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  1. rhetoric
    using language effectively to please or persuade
    Yet the ancient Greek philosopher Aristotle (384-322 B.C.E.) defined rhetoric as “the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion.” At its best, rhetoric is a thoughtful, reflective activity leading to effective communication, including the rational exchange of differing viewpoints.
  2. audience
    a gathering of spectators or listeners at a performance
    In our day, as in the time of Aristotle, those who understand and can use the available means to appeal to an audience of one or many find themselves in a position of strength.
  3. text
    the main body of a written work
    Every essay, political cartoon, photograph, and advertisement is designed to convince you of something. To simplify, we will call all of these things texts because they are cultural products that can be “read,” meaning not just consumed and comprehended, but investigated.
  4. context
    the set of facts or circumstances that surround a situation
    Every text is influenced by the historical, cultural, and social movements of its time. We call these broad influences context.
  5. occasion
    the time of a particular event
    Within that context, a text is also directly informed by the occasion—the specific circumstances, atmosphere, attitudes, and events surrounding the creation of the text.
  6. purpose
    an anticipated outcome that guides your planned actions
    Purpose is the goal the speaker wants to achieve.
  7. speaker
    someone who expresses in language
    The speaker is the person or group who creates a text.
  8. persona
    an image of oneself that one presents to the world
    Sometimes, there is a difference between who the speaker is in real life and the role the speaker plays when delivering the speech. This is called a persona. Persona comes from the Greek word for “mask”; it means the face or character that a speaker shows to his or her audience.
  9. subject
    the topic of a conversation or discussion
    The subject is the topic. And the subject should not be confused with the purpose, which is the goal the speaker wants to achieve.
  10. appeal
    (rhetoric) a method or mode of persuasion
    Now that we’ve practiced analyzing the rhetorical situation, the next step is to use the tools of rhetoric to persuade an audience. Let’s start with what Aristotle called rhetorical appeals.
  11. ethos
    a rhetorical appeal that relies on the character or credibility of the speaker
    A speaker’s ethos (Greek for “character”)—expertise, knowledge, experience, sincerity, or a combination of these factors—gives the audience a reason for listening to this person on this subject.
  12. logos
    a rhetorical appeal to the audience's reason or rationality
    Speakers appeal to logos, or reason, by offering clear, rational ideas. Appealing to logos (Greek for “embodied thought”) means thinking logically—having a clear main idea and using specific details, examples, facts, statistics, or expert testimony to back it up.
  13. counterargument
    an opinion offered in opposition to another position
    One way to appeal to logos is to acknowledge a counterargument—that is, to anticipate objections or opposing views.
  14. concession
    a point that is yielded
    This combination of concession and refutation actually strengthens your own argument; it appeals to logos by demonstrating that you understand a viewpoint other than your own, you’ve thought through other evidence, and you stand by your view.
  15. refutation
    the act of determining that something is false
    This combination of concession and refutation actually strengthens your own argument; it appeals to logos by demonstrating that you understand a viewpoint other than your own, you’ve thought through other evidence, and you stand by your view.
  16. pathos
    a style that has the power to evoke feelings
    Pathos is an appeal to emotions, values, desires, and hopes, on the one hand, or fears and prejudices, on the other.
  17. propaganda
    information that is spread to promote some cause
    Although an argument that appeals exclusively to the emotions is by definition weak—it’s generally propagandistic in purpose and more polemical than persuasive—an effective speaker or writer understands the power of evoking an audience’s emotions by using such tools as figurative language, personal anecdotes, and vivid images.
  18. polemical
    of or involving dispute or controversy
    Although an argument that appeals exclusively to the emotions is by definition weak—it’s generally propagandistic in purpose and more polemical than persuasive—an effective speaker or writer understands the power of evoking an audience’s emotions by using such tools as figurative language, personal anecdotes, and vivid images.
  19. connotation
    an idea that is implied or suggested
    He also chooses words with strong positive connotations: grand, greatest, wonderful, honored, blessing.
Created on Tue Apr 27 15:15:53 EDT 2021 (updated Fri Apr 30 13:56:15 EDT 2021)

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