READING AND WRITING ARGUMENTS
    Analysis
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    • READING AND WRITING ARGUMENTS
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    Fall 2019
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    Analysis

    • Due Sep 24, 2019 by 3:30pm
    • Points 20
    • Submitting a file upload

    The analysis is a written document of approximately 1,200 words (no particular stylistic format is necessary) containing the following sections:

    1. Summary: State in a sentence the topic this argument addresses and provide instructions for how to access it (or attach a copy).

    2. Purpose: Articulate the specific argument that this document makes and what it wants the reader or viewer to do. Keep in mind that many documents share a general goal; push to uncover the particular assertion this document makes.

    3. Exigence: Discuss what is prompting this argument. Identify the relevant need or needs in the situation that it addresses.

    4. Audience: Describe the argument's likely target and explain how its concrete features attempt to construct an image of this audience. Probably no text is "for anybody" or "for a general audience"; identify who actually would respond to the argument.

    5. Context: Discuss relevant aspects of the document's situation. Identify issues, conversations, or historical events that might be relevant to its argument. Place it within a genre context and connect it with similar documents that function as a peer group.

    6. Strategies: Discuss the specific rhetorical strategies the document employs in order to sway the reader or viewer. Focus on fine-grained issues such as word choice, use of metaphor, use of color and imagery, and choices of document design. Classify these strategies in terms of their rhetorical appeals and their effects.

    7. Medium: Discuss how the document uses its medium to suit its audience, context, or purpose.

    8. Arrangement: Discuss how the document's material is sequenced and the effects of this arrangement.

    9. Evaluation: Determine if the document's argument is effective for the audience, context, and purpose you identify based on what you have uncovered about its strategies, medium, and arrangement. Identify any relevant logical fallacies that it contains. Discuss other intended or unintended effects the document has apart from persuasion.

    All sections should be thorough and informative. Analyses will be submitted as an electronic file in a common format (such as Microsoft Word, Apple Pages, or .pdf).

    Commented example analyses from previous students are available below but note that they do not respond to precisely the same assignment, so do not use them as direct models for your own work:

    • Plastic Waste PSA
    • "Why Article 13 Will Destroy YouTube"
    • Disney Star Wars Ad
    • Anti Animal Testing Ad
    • “Is Mr. Trump Nuts?”
    • “Aziz Ansari Is Guilty. Of Not Being a Mind Reader”
    1569353400 09/24/2019 03:30pm
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