Writing the rhetorical analysis
Always remember, a good and effective rhetorical analysis connects all sides of the rhetorical triangle. It analyzes: How the author achieves his/her purpose (or does not achieve) for his/her intended audience. It analyzes the strategies and tools and how effective they are when we consider purpose and audience. Completing the Rhetorical Triangle
In writing an effective rhetorical analysis, you should discuss the goal or purpose of the piece; the appeals, evidence, and techniques used and why; examples of those appeals, evidence, and techniques; and your explanation of why they did or didn’t work. A good place to start is to answer each of these considerations in a sentence or two on a scratch piece of paper. Don’t worry about how it sounds—just answer the questions. Building Analysis by Prewriting
Your first step? Speculate on the author’s purpose. What is he/she hoping to achieve? Your second step is to speculate on the author’s audience. Who do you think the author writes for? Purpose and Audience
The third step is to look for strategies and tools the author uses and to find examples of them ! The Strategies
Prewrite. List your purpose, audience, and strategies with examples. Speculate on why? Is it effective or ineffective and why? Thesis statement and introduction: short and to the point Analysis – the body. The meat of this essay. Conclusion: Your conclusion should briefly restate your main argument. It should then apply your argument on a higher level. Why does your argument matter? What does it mean in the real world? Writing