They are the three modes of persuasion.
What are ethos, pathos, and logos?
It refers to the arrangement and composition of a scene.
What is mise-en-scene?
It is the X in the XYZ format.
What is the position you are arguing against called?
This names an online practice involving GIFs that reinforce the stereotype of black people as emotionally hyperbolic.
What is digital blackface?
In MLA, the title of a longer work, like a book or film, usually appears in this format.
What is italicization?
What is the rhetorical appeal that focuses on the speaker’s credibility?
It refers to a rapid succession of images in a film to establish an association or mark the passage of time.
What is a montage?
It is what distinguishes primary sources from secondary sources.
What is a firsthand account or raw information?
According to Nicholas Carr, the Internet causes this to happen to our brains.
What is short attention span/inability to think deeply?
In MLA, the title of a short work, like a journal article, poem, or essay, should usually appear in these.
What are quotation marks?
An image that shows a crying child to elicit sympathy uses this rhetorical appeal.
What is pathos?
It is Truman Burbank's catchphrase.
What is "In case I don't see ya, good afternoon, good evening, and good night"?
They are the parts of an annotated bibliography entry.
What are heading, identification, summary, evaluation, and function?
Robinson Meyer describes them as Internet-connected devices with cameras that function as nodes in a system.
What are networked lenses?
They are what you put on the top right-hand side of your paper.
What is your last name and page number?
Nicholas Carr uses these rhetorical appeals in the following sentence: "A recently published study of online research habits, conducted by scholars from University College London, suggests that we may well be in the midst of a sea change of how we read and think."
What are ethos and logos?
It means the sound that characters in a film can't hear.
What is non-diegetic sound?
These are five features that distinguish academic from non-academic secondary sources.
What are purpose, author, audience, style, publisher, reference, and peer review (any 5 out of the 7)?
Chris Gilliard compares this modern technology to phrenology and craniometry.
What is biometrics/facial recognition?
It is the order in which sources on a works cited page should be listed.
What is the last name in alphabetical order?
This example uses all three rhetorical appeals.
The following example involves which rhetorical appeals: (any sentence that uses ethos, pathos, and logos)?
The final scene of The Truman Show primarily uses these techniques of cinematography to show Christof's control over Truman.
What are backlighting and high angle?
These are three of the requirements for an inquiry question.
What are not easily answerable, non-factual, open-ended, answerable by analysis of the primary source, and appropriate scoped (any 3 out of the 5)?
It is the X in Michel Foucault's book Discipline and Punish.
What is the humanitarian explanation of the historical change in punishment?
This is the information you should provide in your in-text citation when quoting from an article.
What are the author’s last name and page number?