Eng301 Writing and Rhetorical Conventions
Rhetorical Analysis Essay Guidelines

Peer Evaluation: Drafts must be posted to your group's topic thread in the Discussions section of Blackboard by the start of class on Friday, January 26. Evaluations must be complete by the start of class on Monday, January 29, in order to receive credit.

Revised Draft Due Date (to the instructor): 12 p.m. Wednesday, January 31, in the Essays folder in Blackboard. Instructor notes and feedback will be posted by Wednesday, February 7.

Overview:
Rhetorical Analysis, “a close reading of a text to find how and whether it works to persuade,” goes beyond summarizing a text, but may include several developmental and organizational strategies, including summary, comparison and contrast, and definition.  A good rhetorical analysis shows readers how effectively or poorly an argument succeeds.  Keep in mind that a rhetorical analysis does not make an argument about the text’s topic—our focus should always be on the text itself.

Visual rhetoric uses visual cues, pictures, colors, text, fonts, and other visually oriented elements, to persuade, often in combination with written texts. A rhetorical analysis of an example of visual rhetoric should break down the important parts of the example and demonstrate its effectiveness or lack of effectiveness. You might choose to examine the use of ethos, pathos, or logos in the image, perhaps all three, or perhaps examine other rhetorical devices used in the example. What you analyze depends on what you, the analyst, sees as most significant and worth examining.

One example:  The Daily Show’s website works effectively to provide its target audience access to content and information they are most interested in.  I will examine the website’s layout, use of fonts and text, and its pictoral elements (such as pictures and links to videos). 

A weak and off-track example:  I will examine an advertisement for a study helper and argue that Common Core is vital to all students and that minority students need more financial assistance to do better on standardized tests. (What exactly does the argument in the second half have to do with examining the advertisement?)

A good rhetorical analysis identifies specific rhetorical moves and shows how they function.

Assignment:
Choose one or more of the artifacts from the 1969-1970 MASC collection and write an analysis of the artifact(s), focusing on the argument(s) and rhetorical moves, using concepts and principles from the readings and class discussion to illustrate the effectiveness or ineffectiveness of the argument(s) and rhetoric.

You can find links to digital copies of the print artifacts and other artifacts for the MASC's collection at WSU Student Unrest of the '60s and '70s.

The artifact may be text, visual, or multimodal (i.e. it includes visuals and text). You are welcome to compare and contrast more than one artifact, but the use of more than three should be avoided.

No sources besides the artifact(s) you choose to analyze are required, however you are welcome to use other sources if they contribute to your analysis.

Your target audience should be the audience of a peer-reviewed journal who would like to know more about the rhetoric of the artifact(s). Your language and style should take into account how this audience may expect your analysis to be presented.

Goals and expectations:

Your draft must include a half-page to full-page Draft Reflection, in paragraph form, on:

Our overall goal for this essay is to begin practicing the key skills we will use in future essays, including the establishment of claims, use of supporting examples, analysis of these examples to show how they support our claims, and the application of analysis to rhetoric.

Note:  All essays will be randomly checked for plagiarism, and writing samples from you will be kept to cross-check papers.  Don’t take the chance—don’t plagiarize!

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