Rhetorical Analysis
Narrative Writing
Story Arc
Rhetorical Devices
Parts of the Essay
100

The chosen group of people you write for.

Audience

100

The time and place where the events of a story take place.

The Setting

100

The moment of highest drama and tension in a narrative, in which the main conflict is confronted fully.

Climax

100

When multiple words in a sentence begin with the same letter.

Alliteration

100

This crucial sentence typically goes in your introductory paragraph.

Thesis Statement

200

The surrounding circumstances and context of a piece of rhetoric.

Rhetorical Situation

200

The central struggle or tension within a narrative that shapes the plot and drives the action forward.

The Conflict

200

The point in the story arc where the main conflict is introduced and the tension begins to build.

Rising Actions

200

An indirect reference meant to bring something to mind.

Allusion

200

This part of the essay should not present the reader with any new ideas or information.

Conclusion

300

First step/question you ask when conducting a rhetorical analysis.

What is the author trying to do? or What is the purpose?

300

When the story is written from the direct perspective of the main character, using "I."

First Person Perspective

300

The final step in the story arc in which all loose ends of the narrative are tied up and the story concludes.

The Resolution

300

Describing something by literally calling it something else.

Metaphor

300

This sentence expresses the main idea of a paragraph.

Topic Sentence

400

Second step/question you ask when conducting a rhetorical analysis.

How are they doing this? or What rhetorical strategies are they using?

400

The two types of third person perspective?

Third Person Limited and Third Person Omniscient

400

A story arc that begins and ends in the same place.

The Hero's Journey

400

The repetition of a word or phrase at the beginning of successive clauses.

Anaphora

400

This is when you review your essay carefully to find and correct mistakes in grammar, style, and spelling.

Revision

500

Third step/ question you ask when conducting a rhetorical analysis.

Is the author effectively achieving their purpose?

500

A main idea or message that is presented by the author in various ways throughout a narrative.

Theme

500

Story arc split into three parts, where each part may have its own rising action, climax, and resolution.

The Three Act Story Arc

500

Exaggerated statements or claims not meant to be taken literally.

Hyperbole

500

These words and/or phrases signal the relationships between ideas and make them clear to the reader.

Transitional Words or Phrases

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