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Developing a Subject Chapter 2
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Clustering A form of brainstorming used to organize and generate ideas Begin with a word or phrase Quickly jot down words or phrases that come to mind from the original word and the other words
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Understanding the Rhetorical Situation Rhetorical Stance Who is your audience (readers) What is your purpose for writing
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“Base” Audience: education community at large “intelligent nonspecialists” they have no special knowledge or training in the topic about which you are writing
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Establishing a Reader-Writer Relationship Identity as a writer How do you see yourself in relationship to the reader and the subject? Identity of your audience Age group, education, economic level Read passage on page 33
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Context or Occasion for a given piece of writing For what event am I writing this The Purpose for a piece of writing What am I trying to achieve?
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A few purposes are: to entertain to persuade to instruct to encourage to take action to encourage to take a side
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Organizing a subject
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Natural Order Self organizing first this, then this (chronological) left to right, right to left (description) part one, part two
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Logical Order Must make a conscious decision about its structure Should you analyze X as a whole then Y as a whole or should you do it in parts What seems to be the most logical way to write your paper
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Intuitive Order Following feelings and setting them down as felt Note: certain subjects and informal types of writing lend themselves to the intuitive order; most do not
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Working Outline Committing to paper specific allusion Read White’s allusion (p. 38) Allusion (Rhetorical Device) Reference to a person, place, thing, work of literature, or a work of art Remember outline is a working outline; not a final. It can and should change
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