110 likes | 308 Views
Introduction to Rhetorical Analysis. AP Lang & Comp. Aristotle’ Rhetorical Triangle. Rhetor Speaker Writer. Rhetoric, according to Aristotle was the “art of making truth effective.”. Audience. Subject/Purpose.
E N D
Introduction to Rhetorical Analysis AP Lang & Comp
Aristotle’ Rhetorical Triangle • Rhetor • Speaker • Writer Rhetoric, according to Aristotle was the “art of making truth effective.” Audience Subject/Purpose Plato taught that rhetoric could be dangerous in the hands of a salesman... or worse, a politician.
Persona (The “character” that the rhetorassumes) rhetor A persona comes loaded with cultural connotations and values. A persona is selected to appeal to the intended audience. audience
Audience: The group to whom the rhetor is directing the message.
Purpose: Intention of the rhetor • Why is this rhetor presenting this message to this audience?
Exigency: • Context when the message was given. • Occasion of the message in temporal and cultural terms. • The given circumstances of the message’s time and place, culturally speaking. • Zeitgeist (German): the intellectual fashion or dominant school of thought that typifies and influences the culture of a particular period in time • From the notion that "no man can surpass his own time, for the spirit of his time is also his own spirit“ (Magee, Glenn. The Hegel Dictionary, 2011). • Connotation: The sense of the spirit of the times • Apply generally (the 60’s, man) • Or specifically (summer at 15th street) • *From Philospher Georg Hegel who believed that art reflected, by its very nature, the time of the culture in which it is created.
Organization and Arrangement Think of a museum. Organization is like the building that will house the works. Arrangement is like the placement of the works on the inside.