Rhetorical Situation
Close Reading and Advertising Rhetoric (1)
Close Reading and Advertising Rhetoric (2)
100

The means through which your message is disseminated

Medium

100

What is going on socially and politically--both now and during the period when the text was created. This informs our perception of the text.

Historical Context

100

How the ad is ordered and laid out to guide the viewer's experience of the ad in time and as a sequence of propositions

Arrangement

200

The circumstances surrounding your communication

Context

200

The perspective from which the brand or product is shown to the viewer

Point of View

200

The circumstances and details within a text that guide how we read the text

Textual Context

300

The reason and motivation for why you are communicating a specific message 

Purpose

300

How advertisers want consumers to perceive the brand or product

Positioning

300

How advertisers support positioning through written or spoken language in the ad

Copy Strategy

400

Your attitude about, interest in, and strength of opinion about the topic. Your positionality, identity, and sociocultural context inform this. 

Stance

400

A form of reading in which the reader takes additional care and deliberation. A "mindful, disciplined reading of an object with a view to deeper understanding of its meanings" (Brummett 11). 

Close Reading

400

"The object that generates the meanings you want to know more about" (Brummett 11)

Text

500

A way of categorizing communication--both documents and cultural texts--based on similarity in form, style, content, and purpose

Genre

500

A form of arrangement in which "two or more things" are placed "side by side [...] to compare or contrast or to create an interesting effect" (Merriam-Webster). 

Juxtaposition

500

The manner in which the ad is presented. This manner entails how the viewer should evaluate the brand or product.

Delivery

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