Foundations in Rhetoric & Media
Text and Visual Communication
Audience and Culture
Publics and Counterpublics
Representation and Identity
100

These were "arguerers for hire" who trained Greek citizens in the art of persuasion.

Sophists.

100

This stage of textual analysis is focused on judgment.

Evaluation.

100

This view of media is interested in how we engage in media content in daily life, such as watching a show with friends.

Ritual.

100

This emerges in opposition to a public.

Counterpublic.

100

This refers to media depicting identities and topics.

Representation.

200

This communication tradition focuses on signifier and signified.

Semiotic.

200

This would involve using one's physical self (such as duct-taping their mouth) as a means of activism.

Body rhetoric.

200

This is the belief that others are more influenced by media texts than we are.

Third-person effect.

200

Habermas theorized this concept to describe civic engagement, similar to a town square.

Public.

200

This is the trope of a disabled person who is seen as transcending disability, as if it were a superpower.

Supercrip.

300

This media studies tradition focuses on reaching a large population through messages.

Mass media.

300

This element of film rhetoric focuses on how audiences might find commonalities with the characters portrayed.

Film identification.

300

Edmond describes _______________, or the ways that we make intentional choices about media.

Careful consumption.

300

This refers to the ways that counterpublics move between communication internally and reaching external audiences.

Oscillation.
300

This refers to the repeated exclusion of an identity from media representation.

Symbolic annihilation.

400

This component of analyzing media is in the context of power.

Critical.

400

What major phrase does Jeffries critique in Spider-Man: Into the Spiderverse?

"Anyone can wear the mask."

400

This concept refers to the combination of globalization with free market capitalism.

Neoliberalism.

400

________ publics are generally capable of making change while ________ publics are less able to do so.

Strong; weak

400

This refers to the idea that media makes, rather than simply reflects, reality.

The work of representation.

500

________ is someone speaking, while __________ is someone who studies rhetoric.

Rhetor; rhetorician.

500

Brunner & DeLuca argue that this concept describes our engagement in mobile spaces of multiple media.

Panmediation.

500

This is the "implied audience" in rhetorical discourse.

Second persona.

500

This refers to rejecting pathological and clinical descriptions of identity.

Demedicalization.

500

This refers to the idea that a marginalized population bears the weight of speaking on behalf of their entire group.

The burden of representation.

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