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SPRING 2015 UNIT 2 ARGUMENT REVIEW. VOCABULARY Argument/Argumentation: The process of reasoning systematically in support of an idea, action or theory.

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Presentation on theme: "SPRING 2015 UNIT 2 ARGUMENT REVIEW. VOCABULARY Argument/Argumentation: The process of reasoning systematically in support of an idea, action or theory."— Presentation transcript:

1 SPRING 2015 UNIT 2 ARGUMENT REVIEW

2 VOCABULARY Argument/Argumentation: The process of reasoning systematically in support of an idea, action or theory. Rhetoric: The art of speaking and writing effectively

3 ELEMENTS OF AN ARGUMENT Claim: The writer/speaker’s position on an issue Evidence/Support: The observable data, facts, and reasons that give the demonstrate the claim’s validity and accuracy Warrant: The “rules” that explain how the evidence/support is credible Counterclaim: The opponent’s opposition to the claim Rebuttal: How the writer/speaker defends against the counterclaim

4 ELEMENTS OF ARGUMENT CONTINUED… Conclusion/Call to action: After proving a claim and supporting with evidence, author’s make a statement about the cause OR suggest an action that the reader/audience must carry out. In a court of law, the “Call to action” is usually a conclusion that the defendant should be imprisoned or punished.

5 REASONING The method by which writers arrive at their conclusions. Deductive reasoning : The pattern of logic that begins with generalizations and proceeds to a conclusion Inductive reasoning : The pattern of logic that begins with examples and facts and proceeds to a conclusion

6 INDUCTIVE VS. DEDUCTIVE PATTERNS OF REASONING

7 ARGUMENTATION STRATEGIES Rhetorical Devices: Strategies of manipulating the LANGUAGE of the text. Include grammatical, structural, and sensory strategies. Rhetorical Appeals: Different strategies of reaching the AUDIENCE. Ethos Pathos Logos

8 RHETORICAL DEVICES Allusions: References to the author makes that they expect the audience to be familiar with. References include HISTORICAL or FAMOUS People Events Places

9 RHETORICAL DEVICES CONTINUED… Loaded Language: Word choice that is intended to elicit an emotional response Diction that has strong connotations (either positive or negative) Example: Martin Luther King Jr. “I Have a Dream” “ Sweltering with the heat of injustice ”

10 RHETORICAL DEVICES CONTINUED… Parallelism: A form of repetition in which a grammatical form is repeated. When a phrase is repeated with a different “fill in the blank” Example: “I have a dream that one day _______….I have a dream that _______”

11 RHETORICAL DEVICES: FIGURATIVE LANGUAGE When writers and speakers want their text to have strong emotional appeals, they will often take a break from the logical approach and use language that is pleasurable to both hear and imagine. Imagery: Using sensory details. (5 senses) This allows the audience to experience the author’s ideas. Metaphor: Comparing two unlike things Simile: Comparing two unlike things using “like” or “as”

12 ARISTOTLE’S APPEALS

13 UNIT TEXTS “Reading, Writing, Narcissism” -Lilian Katz Declaration of Independence -Thomas Jefferson Letter From Birmingham Jail -Martin Luther King Jr. Birmingham in the 1960’s -Martin Luther King Jr.

14 DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE Inductive or Deductive reasoning? “All men are created equal” “Governments are given powers by the governed. And the government is responsible for maintaining our ‘unalienable rights’” “A government that stops maintaining these rights should be overthrown” “King George has denied our rights…here are 28 inditements to show this.” “Therefore, we are pledge NO allegiance to the British crown, we are starting our OWN government”

15 STRUCTURE OF THE DECLARATION 1 Introduction: We wish to break from Britain. It is unavoidable 2 Preamble : We list our WARRANTS “all men are created equal” Listing the principles of rights and government obligations 3: Body 1: Lists the “grievances” and inditements of King George 4 Body 2: Lists the colonists appeals to the King (their counterclaim) 5 Conclusion: “For these reasons, we no longer owe allegiance to Britain” *Call to action*

16 BIRMINGHAM IN THE 60’S An example of a text that uses the appeal to PATHOS. Listing the experiences of people of color in different scenarios is intended to evoke sympathy in the reader. The tone is very serious The text is emotional yet SUBJECTIVE (often hard to do) Subjective because these experiences were common for all people of color, and YET, they make us feel sympathy without King’s objective viewpoint showing.

17 LETTER FROM BIRMINGHAM JAIL Author’s Purpose: Perspective/Context: Audience: Appeals: Rhetorical Devices: Inductive/Deductive reasoning:


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