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Persuasion and Rhetorical Devices
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Persuasion and Rhetorical Devices

Feb 12, 2016

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Persuasion and Rhetorical Devices. PERSUASION. Persuasion is used when the writer or speaker is trying to convince a reader or listener to think or act in a particular way. PERSUASIVE APPEALS. Appeals to Reason/Logic - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Page 1: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

Persuasion and Rhetorical Devices

Page 2: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

PERSUASION

Persuasion is used when the writer or speaker is trying to convince a reader or listener to think or act in a particular way.

Page 3: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

PERSUASIVE APPEALS

Appeals to Reason/Logic Logical arguments based on verifiable

evidence, such as facts, statistics, or expert testimony

Page 4: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

PERSUASIVE APPEALS

Appeals to Emotion Statements intended to affect

listeners’/readers’ feelings about the subject. These statements often include charged language-words with strong positive or negative associations.

Page 5: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

RHETORICAL DEVICES

Speakers use rhetorical devices to: emphasize their ideas help their listeners to remember

the important points arouse an emotional response in

an audience

Page 6: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

REPETITION

Repetition is expressing different ideas using the same words or images in order to reinforce concepts and unify the speech.

Page 7: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

RESTATEMENT

Restatement is expressing the same idea in different words to clarify and stress key points.

Page 8: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

What’s What?

“We will never give up; we will never surrender, we will never be defeated.”

“We will never…” is an example of…

repetition

“Never give up,”“never surrender,” and “never be defeated.” is an example of…

restatement

Page 9: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

What’s What?

“I wanna talk about me,Wanna talk about IWanna talk about #1”

“Wanna talk about” is an example of…-repetition

“me”, “I” and “#1” is an example of…-restatement

Page 10: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

PARALLELISM

Parallelism is the repetition of a grammatical structure or an arrangement of words in order to create rhythm and make words more memorable.

Page 11: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

Faulty Parallelism Example

faulty parallelism:

She revels in chocolate, walking under the moonlight, and songs from the 1930s jazz period.

Page 12: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

Better Parallelism

good parallelism: She revels in sweet chocolate eclairs, long moonlit walks, and classic jazz music.

"She revels in”"sweet chocolate eclairs," [Adjective--Adjective--Object]

"long moonlit walks," [Adjective--Adjective--Object]

"and classic jazz music." [Adjective--Adjective--Object]

Page 13: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

Even Better Parallelism

more good parallelism: She loves eating chocolate eclairs, taking moonlit walks, and singing classic jazz.

She revels in""eating chocolate eclairs" [Gerund--Adjective--Object of Gerund]

"taking moonlit walks" [Gerund--Adjective--Object of Gerund]

"and singing classic jazz." [Gerund--Adjective--Object of Gerund]

Page 14: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

Analogy

a similarity between like features of two things, on which a comparison may be based: the analogy between the heart and a pump. Examples:

Glove is to hand as paint is to wallCitizens are to president as solar system

is to galaxyHorses are to past societies as

computers are to future societies

Page 15: Persuasion and  Rhetorical Devices

RHETORICAL TRIANGLE