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Diction (Poetry) Literary Non Fiction (BWAM)

Elements Included in Upcoming Units:. Diction (Poetry) Literary Non Fiction (BWAM) Tone (Poetry and BWAM) Elements of Non Fiction (BWAM) Syntax (Poetry) Defense of a Claim (ARP) Connotation* (BWAM) Explicit (Ongoing)

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Diction (Poetry) Literary Non Fiction (BWAM)

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  1. Elements Included in Upcoming Units: Diction (Poetry) Literary Non Fiction (BWAM) Tone (Poetry and BWAM) Elements of Non Fiction (BWAM) Syntax (Poetry) Defense of a Claim (ARP) Connotation* (BWAM) Explicit (Ongoing) Denotation* (BWAM) Implicit (Ongoing)

  2. Elements That Simply Require Review: Affix: Prefixes and Suffixes (See Handout) Freytag's Pyramid Exposition Rising Action Climax Falling Action Resolution catalyst

  3. Elements That Simply Require Review: Point of View First Person Second Person Third Person Limited Third Person Omniscient

  4. Elements You Should Know*: Poetry Fiction Rhythm Literary Movements Rhyme Meter Stanzas *We Will Review These This Week

  5. A Red Herring is a fallacy in which an irrelevant topic is presented in order to divert attention from the original issue. The basic idea is to "win" an argument by leading attention away from the argument and to another topic. - Topic A is under discussion. - Topic B is introduced under the guise of being relevant to topic A (when topic B is actually not relevant to topic A). - Topic A is abandoned.

  6. (Criminal) Red Herring: Original Argument: “We must legalize weed, it is tearing families apart” Red Herring: “But look at all those druggies getting arrested, they are obviously criminals” The Switch: They wouldn’t be getting arrested if the laws were more lenient and conducive to personal freedom. The change in topic is meant to reflect the original argument but is really meant to change the topic. It is a deflection to avoid actually talking about the original premise.

  7. (Economic) Red Herring Original Argument: “We must let the banks fail for their bad practices” Red Herring: “Yea but in tough economic times we need to support our president”

  8. Circular Argument: "The circular argument uses its own conclusion as one of its stated or unstated premises. Instead of offering proof, it simply asserts the conclusion in another form, thereby inviting the listener to accept it as settled when, in fact, it has not been settled. Because the premise is no different from and therefore as questionable as its conclusion, a circular argument violates the criterion of acceptability." (T. Edward Damer, Attacking Faulty Reasoning. Wadsworth, 2001)

  9. Circular Argument (aka Begging the Question) Bill: "God must exist." Jill: "How do you know." Bill: "Because the Bible says so." Jill: "Why should I believe the Bible?" Bill: "Because the Bible was written by God." ------------------------------------------------------------------------- I was late because I didn't get there in time

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