During the second week’s blog post,
I defined rhetoric as the art of
conveying the purpose of a literary work in the most effective manner through
the use of rhetoric figures and other various forms of methods. Rather
than from experience, that definition was derived from the Silva Rhetoricae website
titled “The Forest of Rhetoric.” This website summarized the various rhetorical
techniques and the history of the various uses of rhetoric. However, over the
past semester, I through personally utilizing rhetorical techniques myself, I have
gained better understanding of the term.
Since
before I came to this university, I had experience in writing essays and other
forms of writings. I made use of evidences, tone, diction, and many other
literary techniques. I was taught how to do all of these things, but I never
considered these techniques as rhetorical devices. After viewing them from
rhetorical point of view, they become a little bit more meaningful. Each device
has the purpose of conveying the main thesis better to the audience. The
knowledge of the audience is also more important for the writings must be adjusted
to better commute with them. These past four months, I had the opportunity to
write various assignments from rhetorical perspectives. I always had to keep in
mind what I want to tell the audience and how to convince them of my positions.
The
most prominent example of my uses of rhetorical skills is the fifteen page
argumentative essay. I made use of pathos, logos, and ethos, tone, diction,
allusions, and even kairos. I had to make clear the audience I was addressing
in order to maximize the chances of accomplishing what I wanted to do. The
purpose of the essay was to make sure the lawmakers of this state addresses the
problems of daily fantasy sports and ban it for minors. In order to do that, I
had to make sure they understood that I was directly addressing them. Moreover,
in order to persuade them, I had to make sure my logics stood on firm grounds
and provide sources of my evidences and information to increase my credibility.
That was done to make sure they took my writing seriously. However, simply listing
the arguments was not enough. I had to appeal to emotion as well because doing
so would increase their likelihood to view this subject from my point of view
and make them more sympathetic to my cause. In order to do so, I had to keep in
mind who would read my wring and what is important to them.
Because
the awareness of the audience is one of the most important elements of
rhetorical writing, the audience paper played a big role in raising my
understanding of the term rhetoric. During his assignment, I had to list the
audiences, what influenced their thoughts and what would help them be more
sympathetic to my cause. Also, the purpose had to be listed clearly, as well as
the context. The combination of these points demonstrated the majority of what
I would write in my argumentative essay. They are the core elements in all of
rhetoric, and I believe keeping those points in mind will help me become a
better writer.
In
conclusion, even though my main definition of the term rhetoric has not
changed, and most of the skills I utilized were those I have already learnt,
practicing them with rhetorical perspectives helped me learn how to use them in
a better way. The definition has also grown to include keeping in mind what the
purpose and audience are, and make the audience more sympathetic to my cause.
I agree, I definitely think that writing my essay opened my eyes to the new meaning of rhetoric. I found that implementing ethos, pathos, and logos in my essay made it more convincing and furthered my claim. Good post!
ReplyDeleteI like how you included terms such as tone and diction that we have been using in our writing for awhile. From writing our advocacy paper, it too opened my eyes to the actual meaning of rhetoric. I agree that it is necessary to be aware of the audience. Great post!
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