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VISUAL RHETORIC Kuliah Proses Komunikasi Oleh Coky Fauzi Alfi
cokyfauzialfi.wordpress.com VISUAL RHETORIC
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Topics Define: Visual Rhetoric Characteristics of Visual Rhetoric
Rhetorical Figures The Model of Visual Rhetoric The Genre of Photojournalism
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Classical rhetoric as applied to arguments was concerned with the means of giving the greatest possible persuasive power to the written or spoken word. Pictures can also, like words be used to pose arguments, raise questions, create fictions, present metaphors, or even mount a critique and are not intended as faithful copies of reality.
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Define: Visual Rhetoric
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Sonja K. Foss generally defined visual rhetoric as the study of the use of visual symbols to influence and manage meanings.
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Rhetoric is the art of persuasion and gives possibilities to the designer to construct appropriate messages. The purpose of rhetoric is the efficient use of language in order to shape attitudes in others and influence their behavior. It operates on the basis of logical and esthetic modes to affect interaction in both a rational and an emotional way.
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Characteristics of Visual Rhetoric
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Not every visual object is visual rhetoric
Not every visual object is visual rhetoric. What turns a visual object into a communicative artifact—a symbol that communicates and can be studied as rhetoric—is the presence of three characteristics.
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3 Characteristics of Visual Rhetoric
Symbolic Action To qualify as visual rhetoric, an image must go beyond serving as a sign, however, and be symbolic, with that image only indirectly connected to its referent. Human Intervention Visual rhetoric requires human action in the process of creation and in the process of interpretation. Presence of an Audience Visual elements are arranged and modified by a rhetor not simply for self-expression but also for communication with an audience.
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Rhetorical Figures
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The fundamental operations of rhetorical figures and their relationship
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Relation Identity: is created when the significance between two elements is identical Similarity: there is at least one significant relation in form or content between two elements Difference: the relation between two elements differ totally, one element is totally different than the other Opposition: at least one relation between two elements in form or content are opposed False homology: two elements are compared, however there is no resemblance in reality between the elements, like a paradox
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Rhetorical Operation Addition: One or more elements are added to the proposition (repetition is seen as addition of identical elements) Suppression: One or more elements of the proposition are suppressed, and two derived operations: Substitution is analyzed as a suppression followed by an addition: an element is suppressed in order to be replaced by another Exchange includes two reciprocal substitutions: two elements of the proposition are permutated
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Metonymy: A meaning indicated verbally is set in relation to another meaning, based on a thematic connection.
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Synechdoche: A substitution for a part of something which stands for a whole.
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Amplification: The expansion of a topic through the assemblage of relevant particulars
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Metaphor: An implied comparison between two things of unlike nature
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Personification A comparison where by human qualities are assigned to inanimate objects
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Hyperbole: The exaggeration of an object beyond its natural and proper dimensions
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The Model of Visual Rhetoric
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❶ ❷ ❸ Connection Similiarity Opposition Fusion Meaning Operation
Juxtaposition ❶ Fusion ❷ Replacement ❸ Complexity Visual Structure more Richiness more
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Juxta-position: two unities of significance (two images or signs) stand next to each other
Fusion: two elements of significance are combined Replacement: one element is exchanged for another
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❷
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The Genre of Photojournalism
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The genre of photojournalism offers a particular case for the merits of the narrative theories and criticism in visual rhetorical analysis.
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Raising the Flag on Iwo Jima - Joe Rosenthal (February 23, 1945)
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The Oklahoma City bombing, a fireman rescuing a child - Charles Porter (1995)
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The My Lai Massacre (the Vietnam War mass murder-March 16, 1968)
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