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| 1. |
Locker Room Talk
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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5 pages. This is a comprehensive rhetorical analysis of an essay entitled 'Locker Room Talk'. The subject matter as well as the author's position in the narration of this piece will all come into play in this analysis. Why men engage in what is referred to in the text as locker room talk is analyzed as well as what the underlying reasoning is when these types of conversation take place.
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| 2. |
Rhetorical Analysis
(11 Pages, 131.45 $ (USD) )
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This 11 page paper provides an overview of some of the central aspects of rhetorical analysis. This paper outlines elements like Neo-Aristotlean rhetorical analysis. Bibliography lists 2 sources.
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| 3. |
John F. Kerry’s 1971 Speech “Vietnam Veterans Against the War”: A Rhetorical Analysis
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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A 5 page rhetoric analysis utilizing the neo-Aristotelian approach. The author approaches Kerry’s speech from the perspective of the five canons of the neo-Aristotelian approach: invention, arrangement, style, memory, and delivery, asserting that Kerry makes an effective utilization of emotion to alter his audience’s stance on the issue of the Vietnam War. Bibliography lists 5 sources.
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| 4. |
The Jungle by Upton Sinclair
(8 Pages, 95.6 $ (USD) )
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A paper which considers the text from the point of view of rhetorical analysis, particularly with regard to the rational narrative, and considers the different perspectives a contemporary and a modern audience would adopt. Bibliography lists 8 sources.
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| 5. |
Rhetoric Analysis
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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A 5 page research paper that takes an essay and shows how to apply the principles of classical rhetorical analysis to evaluate how well the argument is made. Bibliography lists 1 source.
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| 6. |
Rhetorical Analysis/Bush's Speech of 9/11/02
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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A 5 page essay that summarizes, discusses and analyzes the rhetorical strategies that President George W. Bush used in his speech of 9/11/02, the anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the country in 2001. The writer argues that the speech is grounded in the extreme emotions generated by the attacks of 9/11. Using this as a foundation, President Bush endeavors to stir up patriotic feeling, mixed with feelings of outrage and sorrow, against an enemy that is pictured as not like "the rest of us" who believe in the sanctity of life, but rather as people who are inhuman and evil. In so doing, he copies a strategy that has been employed by leaders in every war, in every century, because it is only by looking at one's enemy as "other" that people can bring themselves to attack fellow human beings. No additional sources cited.
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| 7. |
Rhetorical Analysis: Stephen Gould
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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(5 pp) In this paper we will be examining a short piece of text (Chauvet Cave: The Discovery of the World's Oldest Paintings - 1996) by Stephen Gould which involves both science and technology, yet we will examine this work from a rhetorical perspective, first as a singularity, then in light of a broader context. Bibliography lists 3 sources. The student should note that the text used is included after the bibliography.
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| 8. |
War on Drugs
(5 Pages, 59.75 $ (USD) )
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A 5 page paper which presents a rhetorical analysis of a speech presented by Hodding Carter III regarding the war on drugs. The title of the speech is “We’re Losing the Drug War because Prohibition Never Works.” This speech addresses many different issues concerning the war on drugs. It is, overall, slightly confusing as to the intent of the speaker. No additional sources cited.
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| 9. |
A Rhetorical Analysis of Political Addresses
(6 Pages, 71.7 $ (USD) )
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A 6 page paper which analyzes, from a rhetorical perspective, three separate speeches. The speeches are, overall, not very effective in presenting believable material, or in instilling a level of passion in the listener. They were essentially failures from a rhetorical and structural perspective. The speeches discussed herein are, “Map Room Speech,” “President’s Address to the Nation,” and “We’re Losing the Drug War because Prohibition Never Works.” No additional sources cited.
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