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Rhetorical Analysis Essay Notes

  • Introductions

    • Guide the reader to the thesis

    • Provide pertinent information about the rhetorical situation

    • Is not overly long

      • In a pinch, the thesis statement can be your intro

    • Process

      • Intro text

        • Not a “hook”, but more of something leading us, providing information, or an interesting insight

      • SPACE

        • Provide the significant rhetorical situation information which applies to the choices you will be analyzing

        • Show a complex understanding of the rhetorical situation

      • Thesis

        • Provide your controlling argument

        • Audience + Choices + Message

  • Line of Reasoning

    • Using each idea to future and argument with a clear “through line”

    • Each sentence is a building block to support a main idea, and no block is laid in the wrong manner

    • Building a Line of Reasoning

      • Divide the passage into rhetorical sections

        • Consider the purpose for each part; this is not necessarily paragraphs

        • Chunk like with like

        • Consider how these sections support each other

        • Look for shifts

      • Explore the passage in chronological order, emphasizing the open features you have identified in your open thesis

      • Your subclaims are what had been accomplished in that given section and how it supports the overall purpose

  • Conclusions

    • Finish with Flourish

      • Broaden

        • Be philosophical

      • Contextualize

        • Be historical

      • Respond

        • Be personal

      • Connect

        • Be emotional

NE

Rhetorical Analysis Essay Notes

  • Introductions

    • Guide the reader to the thesis

    • Provide pertinent information about the rhetorical situation

    • Is not overly long

      • In a pinch, the thesis statement can be your intro

    • Process

      • Intro text

        • Not a “hook”, but more of something leading us, providing information, or an interesting insight

      • SPACE

        • Provide the significant rhetorical situation information which applies to the choices you will be analyzing

        • Show a complex understanding of the rhetorical situation

      • Thesis

        • Provide your controlling argument

        • Audience + Choices + Message

  • Line of Reasoning

    • Using each idea to future and argument with a clear “through line”

    • Each sentence is a building block to support a main idea, and no block is laid in the wrong manner

    • Building a Line of Reasoning

      • Divide the passage into rhetorical sections

        • Consider the purpose for each part; this is not necessarily paragraphs

        • Chunk like with like

        • Consider how these sections support each other

        • Look for shifts

      • Explore the passage in chronological order, emphasizing the open features you have identified in your open thesis

      • Your subclaims are what had been accomplished in that given section and how it supports the overall purpose

  • Conclusions

    • Finish with Flourish

      • Broaden

        • Be philosophical

      • Contextualize

        • Be historical

      • Respond

        • Be personal

      • Connect

        • Be emotional