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American Literature & Rhetoric
                                                                            Robin Dissin Aufses, Renée H. Shea,
                                                                          Lawrence Scanlon, Katherine E. Cordes
 Table of Contents







 1  |  RHETORICAL ANALYSIS  Activity: Analyzing Diction  2  |  EVIDENCE-BASED ARGUMENTS     Bandwagon Appeal
 Activity: Recognizing Civil Discourse     John Muir, from Save the Redwoods   What Is Argument?   Activity: Identifying Logical Fallacies
 The Rhetorical Situation  Syntax  Understanding Claims
    Abraham Lincoln, The Gettysburg Address  Activity: Analyzing Syntax  Activity: Identifying Arguable Claims  Analyzing Visual Texts
    John F. Kennedy, from Inaugural Address              Identifying Fallacies
 Occasion, Context, and Purpose  Activity: Analyzing Tone   Types of Claims  PETA, Feeding Kids Meat Is Child
 Activity: Defining a Rhetorical Situation     Claims of Fact        Abuse (advertisement)
           Activity: Making Claims of Fact
 The Rhetorical Triangle  Analyzing Visual Texts     Claims of Value     Heap Analytics, Same Data,
 Activity: Analyzing the Rhetorical Situation  Analyzing Visual Rhetoric   Activity: Making Claims of Value       Different Y-Axis (graphs)
    Billie Jean King, Serena Is Still Treated      Dodge Durango (advertisement)     Claims of Policy  Activity: Identifying Fallacies in Visual Texts
      Differently Than Male Athletes  Activity: Analyzing Visual Rhetoric  Activity: Making Claims of Policy     Omega Watch, George Clooney’s Choice
    KFC Hot and Spicy Chicken (advertisement)                  (advertisement)
 Rhetorical Appeals  Understanding and Analyzing Evidence      U.S. Department of Education, High School
 Ethos     Types of Evidence                                   Graduation Rate (graph)
 Building Ethos  From Reading to Writing: Crafting a       Personal Experience
   Rhetorical Analysis Essay
    J.D. Vance, from Hillbilly Elegy     Shirley Chisholm, from People and Peace,    Anecdotes  Patterns of Development
 Activity: Building Ethos        Not Profits and War  Activity: Using Personal Experience    Narration
 Logos  Preparing to Write: Annotating Nonfiction    and Anecdotes as Evidence     Judith Ortiz Cofer, from The Myth of the Latin Woman
    Conceding and Refuting  Activity: Annotating an Excerpt     Current Events  Description
 Activity: Analyzing Logos and       Shirley Chisholm, from People and Peace,       Historical Information     Theodore Dreiser, from A Certain Oil Refinery
      Counterargument       Not Profits and War             Process Analysis
     Jia Tolentino, from What It Takes to    Activity: Using Current Events and       E. B. White, from Farewell, My Lovely!
         Put Away Your Phone  Developing a Thesis Statement    Historical Information as Evidence   Exemplification
 Pathos  Supporting Your Thesis     Expert Opinion            Sarah Grimke, from Letter on the Equality
    Making Balanced Appeals  Activity: Organizing a Rhetorical Analysis Essay     Quantitative Evidence    of the Sexes
    Richard Nixon, from The Checkers Speech     Writing Topic Sentences  Activity: Analyzing Evidence     Comparison and Contrast
 Activity: Analyzing Pathos  Activity: Writing Topic Sentences     Florence Kelley, Speech on Child Labor       Eleanor Roosevelt, from Women Must Learn to
     Diana Abu-Jaber, On Recognition and Nation     Using Quotations as Evidence  Logical Reasoning and Organization:       Play the Game as Men Do
 Combining Ethos, Logos, and Pathos     Documenting Sources    Shaping an Argument      Classification and Division
    Helen Keller, Letter to Mark Twain, 1906  Activity: Writing a Body Paragraph   Induction      Martin Luther King Jr., from Letter from
 Revising a Rhetorical Analysis Essay  Deduction               Birmingham Jail
 Analyzing Visual Texts  Activity: Revising a Paragraph  Activity: Using Inductive and    Definition
 Identifying Rhetorical Appeals  Analyzing a Sample Rhetorical Analysis Essay     Deductive Reasoning         Barack Obama, from 2004 Democratic National
                                                               Convention Speech
 Tom Toles, Rosa Parks (cartoon)  “People and Peace, Not Profits and War”     Logical Fallacies     Cause and Effect
 Activity: Identifying Rhetorical Appeals        by Joseph Barrett     Red Herrings and Ad Hominem Fallacies     Robert F. Kennedy, from The Mindless
    Nate Beeler, Government is Watching (cartoon)  Activity: Providing Peer Feedback for Revision      Faulty Analogies        Menace of Violence
              Straw Man Fallacies                        Activity: Identifying Patterns of Development
 Analyzing Rhetoric and Style   Culminating Activity: Crafting a Rhetorical       Either/Or Fallacies
 Diction     Analysis Essay     Hasty Generalization     Working with Sources
    Figurative Language     Dwight D. Eisenhower, Order of the Day     Circular Reasoning  Approaching Sources
              Post Hoc Fallacies                         Activity: Approaching Sources
              Appeal to False Authority                  Examining Sources
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