Rhetorical
Analysis: Critical Writing
When you write a rhetorical
analysis, all you're really doing is putting onto paper the strategies you
discovered/ideas you came up with when reading the text critically. Below is a
set of guidelines devised to help you organize the thoughts from your critical
reading process. The guidelines detail the aspects of the text you might
consider discussing, and they offer you some direction in terms of organizing
your paper. Remember that you do not have to cover all of these aspects when
writing a formal rhetorical analysis.
Guidelines for Rhetorical
Analysis
Your
Title:
The title of your essay is the
first point of contact you have with your reader. What sort of title would
describe your paper and distinguish it from other papers written on the same
essay?
Example: "Political
Spin"
(from
sample) A Rhetorical Analysis of the Letter from George Bush to
Saddam"
Your Introduction: DETAILING
THE RHETORICAL SITUATION
- How would you describe the
rhetorical situation? What will you say about the writer, the
subject, the context, the audience, and the principle
aim/purpose of the text? Are there any aims subordinate to the
principal aim?
- How would you summarize the
essay in one or two sentences? (Try not to digress into a lengthy
paraphrase of the piece.) What is the writer's
thesis
- What features of substance
and style will you focus on in the body of your essay, and why do
consider them so important to the discourse? (This is your
thesis.)
Your Essay's Body:
DISCUSSING THE CONTENT OF THE TEXT
- How does the writer
develop the discourse, and why has she/he chosen these methods of
development?
- How has the writer
arranged the discourse, and why has he/she chosen this pattern of
arrangement over others? (Make specific reference to the introduction, the
thesis, the body, and the conclusion if you think it is
important.)
- If the essay is persuasive, which
of the persuasive appeals (logos, ethos, or pathos) predominates, and
how do these appeals strengthen or weaken the
argument?
- Are there any fallacies or
other weaknesses in the argument? How do they affect the reader’s
response to the work? What kinds of assumptions are at work here?
Are they fair assumptions? What are the particular strengths of the
argument? How does the writer establish common
ground?
- Does the writer make effective
use of concession, refutation, and/or
counter-argument?
Your Essay's Body:
DISCUSSING THE STYLE OF THE TEXT
- Which of the following features
of style do you consider most important to the discourse and
why?
2.
- language (including level of
diction and tone of voice)
- figurative language, symbolism,
allusion (biblical, historical etc.), irony
- humour
- number and length of
paragraphs
- length and style of
sentences
- rhythm and
repetition
- How do these particular features
of style enable the writer to achieve her/his purpose?
Your Conclusion:
Use your conclusion to comment on
the effect and effectiveness of the essay as a whole. How well does the writer
achieve the purpose, appeal to the audience, and demonstrate the effect of style
on content?
Note the following
conventions of analysis:
- Analyze a text in the simple
present tense
- Enclose essay titles inside
quotation marks
- Refer to yourself as "the reader"
or "the audience"
- Support your claims with textual
evidence (direct quotations and paraphrases)