rhetorical appeals

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Ethos, Pathos, and Logos The Rhetorical Appeals

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This presentation covers the rhetorical appeals and the Rhetorical/Visual Analysis assignment.

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Page 1: Rhetorical Appeals

Ethos, Pathos, and LogosThe Rhetorical Appeals

Page 2: Rhetorical Appeals

Rhetoric

What is rhetoric? We often associate rhetoric with

politicians; for example, “He uses empty rhetoric.”

However, we will be working with rhetoric as the study and practice of strategic communication:

“The strategic use of the various modes of language (spoken, written, body, visual, etc.) to create meaning and/or argument” (GFC, 2013, 747).

Page 3: Rhetorical Appeals

Other Definitions of Rhetoric

“Rhetoric is the use of words—either spoken or written—as well as visuals to achieve some goal” (Roen, Glau, & Maid,2012, p. 1).

“The faculty of observing, in a given case, the available means of persuasion.”

Aristotle

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Rhetorical Appeals

Acts of persuasion can be classified into the following three rhetorical appeals:

Ethos: Appeal to credibility

Pathos: Appeal to emotions

Logos: Appeal to logic

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Ethos

Ethos appeals to credibility using: Authority Reputation Values

Ethos represents the overall persona of the speaker/writer and his/her attempt to be authoritative.

The following Nike commercial employs ethos by fitting its message to the celebrity (a form of authority) who endorses it:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tmc8Slg1VIQ

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Ethos

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Pathos

Pathos appeals to the emotions, values, and beliefs of the audience.

In this clip from Mad Men, Dom Draper evokes a nostalgic emotion of longing through a combination of images and words.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=suRDUFpsHus

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Pathos

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Logos

Logos appeals to reasoning and numbers. It is also represented by well-organized argumentation and internal consistency.

This anti-tobacco PSA is based on a single powerful statistic:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Y_56BQmY_e8

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Logos

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Rhetorical Appeals

Note that, although the rhetorical appeals have different focuses, they can work together, sometimes simultaneously, to create an effective message. For example, the creation of a logical, well-organized argument is most clearly an example of logos, but it can also promote the writer’s ethos by making him/her look well-informed and professional.

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Rhetorical/Visual Analysis

The Rhetorical and Visual Analysis is worth 100 points, or 10% of your overall grade.

3-5 pages APA format Should following academic writing

conventions Examine the instructions and

rubric on Blackboard for more information.

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Assignment Checklist

For the Rhetorical and Visual Analysis, you are supposed to do the following:

1. Choose a persuasive document with visual and textual characteristics to analyze.

2. Analyze its audience.

3. Analyze the writer/artist’s use of the rhetorical appeals (ethos, pathos, and logos).

4. Examine whether or not the rhetorical appeals are effective for the intended audience.

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Rhetorical/Visual Analysis

The document you are going to analyze needs to meet certain criteria:

1. The speaker/writer must be trying to persuade his/her audience.

2. You need to pick a text with a visual (that is, it needs to have both words and a visual such as pictures or a video).

3. The text and visual need to have enough substance to carry you through a 3-5 page analysis.

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Rhetorical/Visual Analysis

You need to choose an object of analysis that has both written/spoken text and visuals. For example:

Lyrics and a professional/official music video

A political cartoon An opinion piece with a visual An advertisement or poster with a

substantial amount of text A commercial (analyze the visuals

separate from the spoken text)