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Zhong, Jihong – English Language Teaching, 2017
Abstract of a thesis is the brief and accurate representation of the thesis, with the important function of persuading readers to read on the thesis. So how the writer constructs the abstract and wins readers' recognition is our main focus. On the basis of Burke's Identification Theory, this paper analyzed 10 abstracts from "Nature" from…
Descriptors: Documentation, Theses, Rhetorical Criticism, Scientific and Technical Information
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Benson, Thomas W. – Central States Speech Journal, 1978
Discusses nine senses which constitute a topical system for rhetorical critics. Each suggests a way of assessing the communicative potential of a variety of texts and is represented by the following critics: intentionalists, social critics, Boothians, critics of imitative rhetoric, formalists, genre critics, implicit rhetorical theorists,…
Descriptors: Classification, Critical Reading, Literary Genres, Literary Styles
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Allen, Gilbert – College English, 1981
Examines three representative short poems to illustrate some of the difficulties that traditional textual criticism would encounter with them. Outlines some ways in which different approaches could deal with these difficulties. (RL)
Descriptors: College English, Critical Reading, Higher Education, Literary Criticism
Larson, Suzanne – 1979
As an initial step toward discovering whether a separate genre of women's rhetoric exists, this paper analyzes rhetorical forms used by Mary Daly in the book "Gyn/Ecology." The paper first outlines criteria for determining whether a form has rhetorical significance and traces the historical background of the contemporary feminist…
Descriptors: Females, Feminism, Language Styles, Language Usage
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Bradford, Richard – Visible Language, 1988
Examines how literary criticism exploits and marginalizes the poem as printed artifact. Argues that the author-centered, phonocentric premise of close reading neutralizes spatial dynamics and reduces material identity to the status of a transparent medium. Suggests that appreciation of silent visual form is a convention of post modernist writing.…
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Literary Criticism, Literary Devices, Literary Styles
Marcuse, Michael J. – 1980
In the period from 1950 to the present, there has been a progressive realization of the rhetorical character of scientific and technical discourse, rendering such discourse subject to formal rhetorical study. Audience is now seen as a formative influence on discourse. Technical writing must be tailored to audiences, not simply in terms of…
Descriptors: Audiences, Communication (Thought Transfer), Expository Writing, Literary Styles
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McHughes, Janet Larsen – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1977
Explores concrete poetry through traditional prosodic analyses of representative poems and suggests an analytic framework for the oral interpreter's approach to concrete poetry. (MH)
Descriptors: Interpretive Reading, Literary Perspective, Literary Styles, Poetry
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Winspur, Steven – Visible Language, 1985
Suggests that a poetic writing of traits, inviting readers to seek meaning in a poem's visual form, rests on a myth of the portrait in which marks of a written language are drawn directly from nature. (DF)
Descriptors: Creative Writing, Etymology, Literary History, Literary Styles
Lovely, Deborah – 1992
Resuscitating Charles Darwin's language from historians' emphatic denigration of the written word serves as an example to demonstrate what the English discipline can accomplish in recovering cultural heritage. Michael Ghiselin, an evolutionary anatomist, suggests that scholars must concentrate on the ideas, not the language, Darwin employed. Yet…
Descriptors: College English, Critical Reading, Evolution, Higher Education
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Fulkerson, Richard P. – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1979
Discusses the effective rhetoric of Dr. King's "Letter" in terms of his use of refutative logic to address two audiences simultaneously, using one to provide a focus through which the other could be addressed. The "Letter" is adapted to both audiences on structural, logical, and stylistic levels. (JMF)
Descriptors: Audiences, Civil Rights, Essays, Letters (Correspondence)
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Carlson, A. Cheree – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1988
Shows how the rhetoric of selected woman humorists from 1820 to 1880 exemplifies the operation of various comic literary reference frames. Asserts that their comic frame disintegrated because these writers were unable to foster identification between females and males and failed to provide a world view that could accommodate social change. (MM)
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Authors, Comedy, Females
Reeves, Carol – 1994
Satirical writing offers a means of encouraging students to criticize those forms of victimization and inequality that trouble them most without that overt, dogmatic indoctrination of a political agenda that many would consider an anathema to democratic teaching. The indirect, satirical jab provides students with an intellectually challenging and…
Descriptors: Academic Discourse, College English, College Freshmen, Discourse Analysis
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Freedman, Carl – College English, 1981
Analyzes George Orwell's 1946 essay, "Politics and the English Language," to develop an argument about compositional pedagogy and the nature of writing itself. Points out the dangers of promulgating only the "plain style" of language usage and the paradoxical advantages of combining classical rhetoric with radical politics. (RL)
Descriptors: College English, Higher Education, Language Styles, Language Usage
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Morris, Barry Alan – Quarterly Journal of Speech, 1987
Discusses the failure of Joe Bob Briggs' parody of "We Are the World" in terms of the development of the communal sense that creates a set of group norms, which in turn create "phantom constraints" of which the parody's author may not be aware.(NKA)
Descriptors: Behavior Standards, Community Attitudes, Community Support, Cultural Context