Reference no: EM133262026
Question: Using both models for analyzing rhetorical situation-the Rhetorical Triangle and Burke's Pentad
describe how E.B. White's essay "Once More to the Lake" constructs its argument in relation to its intended audience.
When thinking about the Rhetorical Triangle, consider the following:
Ethos
Does this text seem authoritative or credible to you? Might it seem authoritative or credible to others?
How does the text construct this authority or credibility?
Pathos
How does this text seem to anticipate its audience's needs, values, or emotional sensibilities?
Is the text's appeal to these needs, values, or emotional sensibilities persuasive? Why or why not?
Logos
Does this text rely on inductive reasoning, deductive reasoning, or some combination of the two in communicating its purpose, message, or argument? (Provide some specific examples to support your answer.)
Does this text contain any apparent logical fallacies? If so, which one(s)?
Then, using Burke's Pentad, address each of the five components Burke lays out: Who is communicating in White's essay? (Is it White himself?
How do we know?) What is he saying? Why is he saying it? How does he say it? (What is unique about how White tells us what he thinks we should know?) etc. You may lay this information out in a bulleted list where each bullet is a part of the Pentad, or you may explain the most relevant pieces in a paragraph.