Author's Purpose
Rhetorical Appeals
Techniques in Action
Technique Definitions
What type of Pathos?
100

What verbs would fit a narrative author's purpose?

Tell, recount, etc.

100

Emotion

Pathos

100

Who will stand up and fight for justice?

Rhetorical Question

100

Comparison between two unlike things not using "like" or "as"; saying something is something else figuratively

Metaphor

100

Using what scares someone or makes them anxious to convince them

Appeal to Fear

200

What verbs would fit a descriptive author's purpose?

Describe, illustrate, etc.

200

Logic

Logos

200

If you drink caffeine, then you will become addicted to it.

If/Then

200

Providing an example to prove a point

Exemplification 

200

Using someone's sense empathy or sympathy to convince them

Appeal to Pity

300

What verbs would fit an argumentative author's purpose?

argue, convince, etc.

300

Credibility 

Ethos

300

A real adult can handle his or her emotions. A real adult is able to understand differences make us stronger. A real adult leaves behind petty concerns of childhood.

Parallelism 

300

A short, engaging story used to make a point

anecdote

(NOT antidote) 

300

calling on one’s community spirit, specifically on one’s love of country in an attempt to persuade

Appeal to Patriotism

400

What verbs would fit an informative author's purpose?

inform, teach, etc.

400

What is the difference between a Rhetorical Appeal and a Rhetorical Technique/Strategy?

An appeal is what part of a person's sense of argument you are targeting (logic, emotion, credibility) whereas a technique/strategy is the specific thing you are doing to convince them.

400

A good person is one who can admit when he or she is wrong and apologize.

Redefining Terms
400

Setting two things side-by-side to show the characteristics of each

Comparison 
400

relying on people’s need to feel good about themselves to persuade

Appeal to Vanity

500

What do you need to include when you are explaining an author's purpose(s) in a text?

-a verb (inform, argue, describe, recount, etc.)

(-a preposition or another connecting word to join the verb and subject)

-a subject (an event, situation, person, thing, etc.)

Example: to argue for independence from England

500

Who first discussed the idea of ethos, logos, and pathos all being needed to form a successful argument?

Aristotle 

500

His journey felt like a trip both down the rabbit hole and through the looking glass.

Allusion (NOT illusion)

(to Alice's Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass)

500

To set two things side-by-side to contrast something about them; pointing out a particular difference between two otherwise similar/comparable things to make a point about that difference

Juxtaposition 

500

Why are the types of pathos technically not rhetorical strategies or techniques?

They are defining a specific type of pathos/emotion (an appeal) NOT giving a way that is being done. 

(If the author was to talk a lot about being "a great example of a Brookfield High School student," it is stronger to talk about redefining terms or diction while mentioning that the author is appealing to the emotion of patriotism.)

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