rhetorical modes rhetorical refers to the ancient art of argumentation and discourse. thus,...
TRANSCRIPT
Rhetorical ModesRhetorical refers to the ancient art of argumentation and discourse. Thus, rhetorical modes would be the techniques used to manipulate the language to effectively transmit the author’s message to a reader. Patterns.
Mode may be defined as:a. A manner, way, or method of doing or acting: e.g., modern modes of travel. b. A particular form, variety, or manner: a mode of expression.
Thus, rhetorical modes would be the techniques used to manipulate the language to effectively transmit the author’s message to a reader. Patterns.
Let the question decide the mode.
For example:1. Which is more important, college or
university? - Use Comparison.2. What happens when I don’t attend class regularly? - Use Cause/Effect.
How to decide which to use
DefinitionUses• Helps you better understand your topic.• May suggest an organization for your essay.• Tells the reader exactly what you are talking
about.Example• What is fast-food? A frozen dinner or a Big
Mac?
Chronology
Uses• Trace a topic’s development over time.• Could involve a cause-effect or problem-
solving approach.
Example• Trace the development of fast-food
restaurants since 1950.
Description
Uses• Adds concrete, physical details to an essay.• Must be organized systematically.• May be needed in Definition.
Example• Describe a Big Mac.
Narration
Uses• Introduce or reinforce your topic.• Illustrate a principle.• Clearly identify a problem.
Example• Relate an occurrence at a fast-food restaurant
that illustrates the dangers of food poisoning.
Process (“how to”)
Uses• Focus on the steps needed to do something.
Example• Describe the process for obtaining a burger
from the time the customer places his/her order to the time they receive it.
Classification/Division
Uses• Organize a large number of items into more
manageable groups according to their relative similarities.
• Break a subject down to better understand the whole.
Example• Burgers: hamburgers, fish burgers, veggie
burgers.
Cause-Effect
Uses• Explain the cause(s) of a condition.• Explain the result(s) or effect(s) of a condition.Example• Show how eating too much fast-food may cause
obesity and other health-related conditions.• Show the causes of obesity related to the fast-
food industry.
Question/Answer
Uses• Introduce the topic of a paragraph or essay.• Engage the reader with a question that
arouses their curiosity.Example• Ask the traditional questions:
Who, What, When, Where, Why, How
Example/Illustration
Uses• Support a point.• Clarify an idea.Example“Fast-food restaurants save time.”Illustrate by showing the convenience of drive-throughs.
Problem-Solution
Uses• Introduce a solution.• Could focus on both problem and solution.ExampleProblem - “Dubious nutritious value of fast-foods.”Solution - Propose ways fast-foods could be made healthier.
Cost Benefit
Uses• Analyse the pros and cons of a topic.• Weigh advantages and disadvantages. Example• Focus on individual, community, or global
costs or benefits of fast-foods.• These could include financial, time, health,
energy for example.
Analogy
Uses• Compare two unlike objects to better
understand one of them.
Example• Compare fast-foods to the pace of
contemporary society.
Compare/Contrast
Uses• Show similarities and/or differences.
Example• Compare some aspect of one fast-food
restaurant to another.
Practice
Below are 15 general topics.
Using at least three different organizational modes (methods) per topic, write three different topic sentences for each topic.
Topics
1. Alternative schooling2. Animal rights3. Eating disorders4. Email5. Evolution6. Exercise7. Gas prices8. Internet piracy
Topics continued
9. Global warming10.Organ transplants11.Privacy12.Public speaking13.Same-sex marriages14.Sports violence15.Stress
Examples using the topic “rap music”
1. Cause-Effect: Rap music, with its reliance on ever-changing slang, has expanded people’s vocabulary; for instance, one’s boyfriend is now called one’s “boo.”
2. Definition: Rap music is defined by some as being no more than talking over someone else’s music.
3. Description or Narration: The lights were dim, and the crowd, writhing to the rhythm of the bass, was pressing forward to the stage.
4. Chronology: The style of rap music has evolved considerably since it first gained popularity with North American youth in the early 1990s.
5. Question-Answer: How does rap music manage to offend a broad demographic group while maintaining a strong fan base?
6. Problem-Solution: It may seem somewhat ironic, but it is possible that many of the problems addressed in rap lyrics could be solved through this very same medium.
7. Compare (and Contrast): Rap and hip-hop music in the late 1980s and early 1990s, with their offensive lyrics and radical counter-cultural appeal, can be compared in terms of their sociological implications to the rock-and-roll revolution of the late 1960s and early 1970s.
8. Personal: When I first heard rap music I found the type of lyrics offensive and sexist.
9. Cause-Effect: Living in the ghetto, surrounded by “booty’ and the ‘brothers,” can sometimes cause young men to chant words to a particular rhythm that has no melody.
10. Also: Rap music has been used as a vehicle for the oppressed minority to get its voice heard.
11. Process: To create rap music you need a DJ to provide the beats by mixing records and an MC who takes the beats and contributes the vocals to make the finished product.12. Classification: There are many different forms of rap; these include hop-hop, hard core, and R&B.
13. Definition and Division: Rap is a unique form of music that is built around heavy bass beats mixed with sharp, quick lyrics. There is a whole spectrum of rap music, ranging from slow love ballads to fast-paced dance songs.
14. Cost-Benefit: Though rap may lead young people to openly and healthily question authority and the status quo, it can lead some adolescents to commit acts of violence against society.14. Analogy: Rap can be compared to the
insistent and repetitive chants of an evangelist preacher.
Credits
Henderson, Eric. The Empowered Writer. Don Mills, Ontario: Oxford University Press, 2010. pp. 110-120.