Analyzing the Rhetoric of Visual Arguments

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Visual Rhetoric By: Miranda Young. Main Subject: What is the main subject? That babies are at just as high of a risk to develop lung cancer by second.
Advertisements

Visual Rhetoric Lauren Hiser.
Analyzing the Rhetoric of Visual Arguments Your Goal: As we’ve discussed, just about everything is an argument – even visuals like advertisements, political.
Visual Rhetoric By: Mariah Perkins.
Visual Rhetoric Project Title: : “Lamb of God” Anti- Abortion Ad By: Sydney Wininger.
GCSE ENGLISH Unit One Reading Task. What is the examiner looking for? Comprehension and reading skills Identifying fact and opinion Following the line.
Week 1, Class 2. The rhetorical triangle is a way of thinking about what's involved in any communication scenario. It involves three main parts: a rhetor.
DO NOW Identify whether each statement is True or False
Visual Argument By: Christine Gilbert, Daniela Acevedo, Enrique Orozco, and Fernando Arce.
Nicole Whitmarsh.  This ad is promoting the American Apparel brand.  The target audience includes men and women aged approximately 15-35, as that.
Tiffany Tolsma.
Visual Rhetoric Presentation By: Ryan Edmunds. Background Info. This ad was created by America's Dairy Farmers and Milk Processors. They ran this paper.
RHETORIC A brief introduction. Please grab a notes handout at the front.
Creating a Print Ad. The Purpose If you want to persuade people to drink milk everyday because you believe it’s good for them, then that’s your purpose.
ANALYZING VISUAL TEXTS An Introduction to Visual Arguments.
Visual Rhetoric Jordan Gardner AP Language Letitia Hughes 7 th period.
Visual CultureVisual Culture We live in a visual culture.  We see thousands of images everyday, yet pay attention to only a few.  Think for a moment.
Analyzing the Rhetoric of Visual Arguments
Analyzing the Rhetoric of Visual Arguments
WARNING YOU MAY FIND SOME OF THE IMAGES IN THIS BRIEF DISTRESSING. THEY COME FROM A RECOGNISED SAFETY CAMPAIGN THAT HAS BEEN USED IN AMERICA TO ENCOURAGE.
Introduction Visual arguments are non-verbal arguments that explain the context of the ad without saying anything. Visual arguments can be found in almost.
AP Language Reading Strategies and Rhetorical Analysis
Persuasion + Argument = Rhetorical Triangle
Visual Rhetoric By: Perri Collier.
Rhetoric : the art or skill of speaking or writing formally and effectively especially as a way to persuade or influence people.
Conducting a Rhetorical Analysis
Analyzing Visual Argument
Visual Rhetoric By: Melissa Shirley.
Proposition of Fact In areas without an absolute answer, persuade your audience that one thing or another is fact. For example, if we don't know whether.
Modes of Persuasion Ethos, Pathos, and Logos.
SAT Notes: Please get out your notebook and turn to the writing section. We are taking notes today.
Rhetorical Analysis Say Whaaaaaaa?!.
3 Levels of Thinking Reading Strategy.
A little bit about me… Stand up if the statement applies to you – sit back down if it doesn’t! What do you think the purpose of this activity is? I like.
Emotional Appeals in Persuasive Writing
RHETORIC.
Introducing the Counter Claim and Rebuttal
Text analysis Letter from Birmingham Jail
PERSUASION English Quarter 3.
Print Adverts By Jessica Foster.
Week 3 – day 1 Tuesday, January 30, 2018
Today’s Goals Introduce rhetoric of advertising
English I Bell Work 6 May 2016 On the top of your sheet, answer the following question: How do advertisers try to influence customers?
The Power of Language.
Activity 1.6: Different Ways to See The World
Thinking critically about visual images
Activity 1.7: Visual Argument
The Art of Using Language to Persuade
Ethos…Pathos…Logos “Rhetoric may be defined as the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion” Aristotle.
Visual Argumentation.
Planning for Questioning
Activity 1.7: Visual Argument
Activity 1.6: Different Ways to See The World
Fact and opinion To be able to distinguish between a FACT and an OPINION. To recognise a fact or an opinion within a piece of writing. At the end of this.
Week 1, Class 2.
RHETORIC.
Activity 1.6: Different Ways to See The World
Rhetoric : the art or skill of speaking or writing formally and effectively especially as a way to persuade or influence people.
Because everything’s an argument
Persuasive Appeals and The Rhetorical Triangle
Rhetoric : the art or skill of speaking or writing formally and effectively especially as a way to persuade or influence people.
World Literature Welcome back!!! (Day 1)
SYNTHESIS “For the purposes of scoring, synthesis refers to combining the sources and the writer’s position to form a cohesive, supported argument and.
Art Criticism.
Agenda (for me) Few minutes: ATSS – discussion of Chaps – finish discussion – power quotes, sharing inference frame, etc. Photo Essay Analysis.
Power of Persuasion.
Rhetoric The Greek Philosopher Aristotle defined rhetoric as “the faculty of observing in any given case the available means of persuasion.”
Rhetorical Analysis.
Rhetoric : the art or skill of speaking or writing formally and effectively especially as a way to persuade or influence people.
Do Now: In a newspaper, what is the function of photographs
Presentation transcript:

Analyzing the Rhetoric of Visual Arguments Your Goal: As we’ve discussed, just about everything can be opened up rhetorically—even visuals like advertisements, political cartoons, and photographs. Today, we are analyzing how well the components of an argument work together to persuade or move forward a visual argument.

Deconstructing a Visual Argument The small text reads: “Jacqueline Saburido was 20 years old when the car she was riding in was hit by a drunk driver. Today, at 24, she is still working to put her life back together. Learn more at www.texas.DWI.org, Texas Department of Public Safety, 2003.”

Thinking Out Loud… What is the purpose of this argument? Persuading people not to drink and drive by making them fear death, injury, or arrest. Who is the audience for this argument? Anyone who drives (or rides in a car). What appeals or techniques does the argument use? Emotional appeals (fear, sadness, vanity, shame). Who is making the argument? The Texas Department of Transportation. What facts are used in the argument? The experience of the young woman, and the effect of her accident (how she looks now vs. how she looked before). What cultural values or ideals does the visual evoke or suggest? Drunk driving is detrimental, beauty is important, no one should have to suffer at the hands of another…

Thinking Out Loud… What is the dominant image: a picture of the young woman after the accident. What colors are most prominent? Black, gray, and pink How is the composition framed or cropped? It is a close up of her face What issues are raised and which ones are ignored? Her appearance and the assumption that her life is over because of the way she looks. How does the language or style of the argument work to persuade an audience? The headline “not everyone dies…” implies that being scarred and disfigured is worth than death. How are you directed to move within the argument? There is a link to the Texas Department of Transportation “Save a Life” web site.

The small text begins: “Our little car isn’t much of a novelty anymore. A couple of dozen college kids don’t try to squeeze into it. The guy at the gas station doesn’t ask where the gas goes…”

The small text reads: “Milk makes bones strong. Bones no break when Hulk drink milk.”

The small text begins: “Official prayer sessions in public school seem like a good idea to many Americans provided they get to choose the prayer. But in such a diverse society, how can one prayer satisfy every religious belief? How would you feel if your child were required to say a Catholic prayer in school every day?”

The small text reads: “Physicians Against Land Mines. Member of the International Campaign to Ban Land Mines. www.banmines.org.”

Now it’s Your Turn… In small groups: Analyze the effectiveness of the visual text by considering the key elements involved in the creation and display of the visual and answer the questions on the worksheet provided. Remember—it doesn’t matter if you agree or disagree with the argument being presented. You are analyzing its effectiveness, not defending or challenging its argument.

Kevin Carter’s Visual Argument As we look at the following visual argument on the screen, consider some of the questions on your handout by “thinking out loud” with me. Remember—in the final written analysis, I don’t want you to simply make a list of answers to these questions, instead you will show how key elements in a visual argument actually make it succeed or fail. Think of this as a “close reading” of a visual to analyze whether it works to persuade, and how, or by what elements, it does so.

Draw a modified rhetorical triangle of this visual argument with the photographer, Kevin Carter, as the rhetor. You will supply the subject, audience, context, and intention.