Transcript File

RHETORIC 101
The rhetoric of today
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pKyIw
9fs8T4
“Totally Like Whatever” by Taylor Mali
Rhetoric =
The manipulation of
language for an
intended effect
 Political Speeches
 Love letters
 Text messages
 Memoirs
 Literature
 Poetry
 Song lyrics
 Lectures
 Pamphlets
 Comic Books
 Protest signs
 Bumper Stickers
Rhetorical question
“How many times are you going to make the same
mistake before you get it through your thick
skull?!?”
ACTIVE vs. PASSIVE VOICE
• “Mistakes were made…”
FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE
• Metaphor, simile, personification, etc.
• Personification: Giving a non-human entity a physical,
tangible human form.
• 2 Pac’s gun is personified into a girlfriend: “I'm waitin’ by
the phone. This is true love; I could feel it/A lot of women
in my bed but you the realest”
–2 Pac “96 Bonnie and Clyde”
REPETITON/ANAPHORA
• Anaphora: Repeating a phrase at the beginning of each clause.
• Every little step I take, you will be there
Every little step I make, we'll be together
Every little step I take, you will be there
Every little step I make, we'll be together
–Bobby Brown “Every Little Step”
ANTIMETABOLE/CHIASMUS
• Antimetabole: Repetition of words in successive clauses but transposed
in grammatical order
• “The rhythm is the bass and the bass is the treble” --Warren G
• Chiasmus: Transposed grammar only
• “He knowingly led and we followed blindly“ (adverb/verb; verb/adverb)
HYPERBOLE &
UNDERSTATMENT
ETHOS, PATHOS, LOGOS
Ethical, emotional, and logical arguments.
JUXTAPOSITION
• Definition: the placement of two things side by side.
ANTITHETICAL
JUXTAPOSITION
• Antithesis: the exact opposite
• Antithetical Juxtaposition: polar opposites, side by
side
IRONIC JUXTAPOSITION
ANALOGY
SYNTAX
Which one sounds best? Why?
Times like these sure try men’s souls.
How trying it is (for men’s souls) in these times.
These are trying times for the souls of men.
Soul-wise, these are trying times.
These are the times that try men’s souls!
SYNTAX &
PUNCTUATION
• Consider the effect of the construction/punctuation:
“On a foggy morning another of the Russians is buried;
almost every day one of them dies” –All Quiet on the Western Front
Syntax Examples
• Can you defines these terms?
• Complex
• Compound
• Complex-Compound
• Ellipsis
• Inverted
• Loose
Elements of Style
• Can you define these terms?
• Asyndeton
• Colloquial
• Metaphor
• Inversion
• Paradox
• Pun
• Proverb
SYNTAX/PUNCTUATION
ANALYSIS TIPS
• Consider the cadence: the rhythm or balance.
• Does it sound lyrical, flowery, ornate?
• Does it sound terse, choppy, or monotone?
• Look for patterns
• Consider sentence length and type
• Consider punctuation choice and placement
• Consider how all of these effects work in concert!
• EPIGRAM: a pithy saying or remark expressing an idea in a
clever and amusing way.
• EPITHET: an adjective or descriptive phrase expressing a quality
characteristic of the person or thing mentioned:
• EPILOGUE: a section or speech at the end of a book or play that
serves as a comment on or a conclusion to what has happened.
• EPIGRAPH: a short quotation or saying at the beginning of a
book or chapter, intended to suggest its theme.
• EPITAPH: a phrase or statement written in memory of a person
who has died, especially as an inscription on a tombstone.
• EULOGY: is a speech or writing in praise of a person(s) or
thing(s), especially one recently dead
DON’T JUST IDENTIFY THE
RHETORIC; ANALYZE IT!