When we write we are often confronted with some sort of “rhetorical situation”. This term is best described as a combination of factors. There is a rhetor(s), an exigence, an audience, and specific constraints to consider when analyzing a text. Through an interview with Professor Funnell, who teaches a course that aims to explore the representation of women in various facets of popular culture, I identified how these elements contribute to Beyoncé’s song, Flawless, and consequently discovered how to better address future situations regarding other texts. Music is a way for people to send a message through the lyrics. Most songs are designed to entertain, however, they also communicate a certain message that the rhetor(s) intend to share with an audience. Songs can defy societal norms and provide a new perception of a problem in our culture. Dr. Funnell uses Beyoncé’s song, Flawless, as a prime example in her “broad based discussions about the women, the industries, and the messages in popular culture that are being presented to our society and what effects they have”. So when she uses …show more content…
This proposes that there is a clear bias in the way we nurture girls to be more refined than boys, and encourage them to be more attentive on domestic aspects… basically everything society deems make “a good wife”. Boys are not taught to be good “house-husbands” and marry well, in fact they are taught the complete opposite. They are first and foremost projected to aim for personal success. If a man were to marry and start a family, it is often understood as being a respective choice he makes for additional gratification, but girls learn early on that marriage is not merely a goal, it’s as if it were an obligation; an unmarried man does not magnetize the same societal disgrace as an unmarried
Rhetorical Analysis Essay Authors say things but what are they really trying to say? Evelyn, by Carol guess, is an essay based on a deaf elderly woman who meets one of her neighbors. Her neighbor is the only person who she interacts with, she is a loner. At the end of the story, Evelyn develops a common health problem in elderly people, dementia. Salvage, by Beth Ann Finnelly, is an essay about Beth’s father-in-law.
This is the same idea of Tannen’s essay. The relationship of the mother and daughter and the words that were used affected the thoughts about themselves. They wanted approval just like men want approval from other men. Even though this is an issue today, some men are now choosing to break the traditions even though the are seen as an outcast of the
Rhetorical Précis In her rhetorical essay “From Fly-Girls to Bitches and Hos” (1999), Wesleyan University graduate and feminist Joan Morgan claims that if a man cannot love himself, than he is incapable of loving women in a healthy matter, and it is up to women of color and the African American community to change these threads. Morgan supports her claim using ethos by questioning artists such as B.I.G and their aggressive lyrics, with logos by providing statistics from the U.S Census Bureau in regards to the decrease of the number of black two parent household, and also with pathos by providing a personal example of her family friend. Morgan is hoping to improve the music industry by examining hip hop and rap lyrics in order to raise awareness instead of censoring the industry. Morgan's tone is disdainful, concerned and disappointed in order to establish credibility with her audience, which consist of women of color, feminist, and hip hop artist.
As far as living more worthy, I believe they are absolutely further needy. This is not regarding observing the playing field - this is almost selfless giving to comfort life and adjust some of the consequences of hopeless hardship. Singer begins by exclaiming into question how valuable a human life is and how at ease everyone can commend that a human life would be appreciated in the millions. Singer also emphasizes that we are be capable to conclude that all humans are shaped equal, at least to the level of refuting that a difference of sex, nationality, background and place of home change the worth of a human living.
The further you read into Roxane Gay article, you start to identify who her audience is. “Many of the people who advocate for freedom of speech with the most bluster are willing to waste this powerful right on hate speech” (Gay). This quote shows her audience is, the people use take advantage of our freedom of speech and use that speech for hate towards one another. “There is also this. “Those who mock the idea of safe space are most likely the same people who are able to take safety for granted” (Gay).
Rhetorical Analysis of Macklemore’s song “Otherside” Drug use and addiction impact families, relationships and mental health. It is something that is so often seen and talked about within music and celebrities. Which in turn, can be easily glorified and encourage young people to give drugs a try. Macklemore, a rap artist and his producer wrote a song that sheds truth on addiction and the consequences that come forth with those choices. This song speaks of raw experience, deep regret, and how to overcome, despite peer pressure from others.
A Paper on Rachel Dolezal 1. Outline Text 1, Civil rights activist Rachel Dolezal misrepresented herself as black, claims parents, presents an objective view on the case: whether Rachel Dolezal is African American or not. The author, Jes-sica Elgot describes how Dolezal began to adapt her appearance as African American, and ex-plains in what manner her social circle had affected her. However, according to her parents, she has misrepresented herself as black and she has chosen not to be herself, but somebody she is not.
This paper is a rhetorical analysis for the political memoir Unbought & Unbossed by Shirley Chisholm. This memoir is about the Congresswoman Shirley Chisholm and her difficult, powerful, and motivational path of becoming the first black female to be elected into congress. This memoir breaks her life down and shows all of the struggles of her race, gender, and ethnicity and how she overcame them all to make her way to the top. The memoir is from Shirley Chisholm’s perspective as she tells her story. Chisholm is a female playing in a “man’s world” when it comes to role in politics, she is forced to struggle with competing against the gender stereotypes seen in male and female politicians.
Assignment 2 Naree L. Greenland Argument and Exposition 2152 Aristotle uses ethos to refer to the speaker's character as it appears to the audience. We are more inclined to accept arguments from speakers we trust. Ethos is gained, in part, through identification with one’s audience and era (42). The three main elements of ethos are credibility/trustworthiness, authority and unselfish or clear motives. Oprah Winfrey is arguably one of the most powerful woman in television, a cultural Icon whose philanthropic and altruistic character is well known.
Grimke proclaimed in her letters, girls should be educated to cultivate their minds, to allow time for reading, to be constantly inculcated, and to improve their intellectual capacities rather than exclusively worrying about culinary and manual operations. In other words, Grimke longed for an education where women didn’t spend so much time on domestic duties, such as, “furnishing a well spread table.” Grimke not only wanted a change in women’s education, but a change in their husbands mindset as well. That the husbands would need to encourage their wives and help out around the house in order for Grimke’s vision on education to work out. On the other hand, Grimke still believed that the “knowledge of housewifery” was “an indispensable requisite in woman’s education.”
A perfect example is the “Born This Way” song, in which Gaga emphasizes on the role of genetics and natural factors in determining one’s sexual orientation. So, in the essay titled “When Pop Music Meets a Political Issue: Examining How ‘Born This Way’ Influences Attitudes Toward Gays and Gay Rights Policies”, Jang S. Mo and Hoon Lee study the song’s impact in influencing a change in social, cultural, and political norms towards the queer community. according them, although the song created a controversy among different society groups, it influences people’s behaviors and attitudes towards the LGBTQ community by suggesting that our sexual orientation is out of our control. As matter of a fact, their results reveal “a strong positive link between greater genetic attribution and more favorable attitudes toward gays.” So, by advocating the LGBTQ rights with the “Born This Way” song, Lady Gaga encourage individuals to embrace their sexual identity, opened people’s minds, and prompted members of society including political to support the LGBTQ rights
The nature of womanhood, or what we perceive as the inherent proclivities that govern only those born as a woman, is often the base argument for the unequal treatment of the female sex. Women are weak, natural-born mothers, unfit to do much else beyond simple household chores and rearing children. This portrait of women seems almost comical in its antiquity; however, we cannot disregard the past, as it shapes the present. The question of the nature of womanhood is rarely allowed nuance, which is a shame, because womanhood can be many, often contradictory things. Instead, the traits we often associate with womanhood stem from society’s projection of what women should be, not necessarily what they are.
Judy Brady’s “I Want A Wife” is a revolutionary piece that attempted to reveal the unequal roles men and women held in society. She goes through her prose by listing all the responsibilities her wife must have and the ways to make her happy. Brady’s whole article is satirizing these roles and is, in general, very sarcastic in her tone. She mocks a society that has given women an impossible standard and she starts with the deprivation of her education then continues with the role her wife should play in domestic ways, and then finishes with the expectations the sexual aspects of their relationship. I believe that Brady’s underlying message was and still is important for the development of equality in our nation.
Benjamin Haggerty, or as many know him by “Macklemore”, is a rapper who uses his music as an outlet for reflection, to inform and instruct his listeners to make positive decisions. Today, in especially rap music, drugs are glorified. Teens are constantly exposed to misleading images of drugs from the media and can have a lasting impact their ideology. With every song, music video, or movie, a young teen is listening or watching something that persuades them to think a certain way. However, Macklemore instead advocates for his audience and urges them to avoid his past mistakes.
During the 1890’s until today, the roles of women and their rights have severely changed. They have been inferior, submissive, and trapped by their marriage. Women have slowly evolved into individuals that have rights and can represent “feminine individuality”. The fact that they be intended to be house-caring women has changed.