DUE
TUESDAY, OCTOBER 28
-
Read and Annotate p.381-396
-Picture
analysis, top of p. 383, for larger picture see p. 381DUE Thursday, OCTOBER 30
- Read “Why We Crave Horror Movies” p. 397
- Answer ALL Question for Close Reading, p.399
- Answer Questions About Writer’s Craft, #2-3 p.400
- Pre-Reading Journal Entry p.402
- Read “Showing What is Possible” p.402
-Answer Questions for Close Reading #1-4, p.406
-Answer Questions About the Writer’s Craft, ALL p.406
- Vocabulary Quiz
DUE MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3
-Final Draft of Essay #1, P.401 – emailed by 3rd period
- Blog Post #15
VOCABULARY:
PARONOMASIA: wordplay
based upon similar rather than identical sounds. Example: A gossip is someone with a great sense of rumor.
(Rumor instead of humor).
Anadiplosis
repeats the last word of one phrase,
clause, or sentence at or very near the beginning of the next. it can be
generated in series for the sake of beauty or to give a sense of logical
progression. Example: Pleasure might
cause her read, reading might make her know,/Knowledge might pity win, and pity
grace obtain . . . . --Philip Sidney
Epanalepsis
repeats the beginning word of a clause
or sentence at the end. The beginning and the end are the two positions of
strongest emphasis in a sentence, so by having the same word in both places,
you call special attention to it. Example:Water alone dug this giant canyon; yes,
just plain water.
Procatalepsis,
by anticipating an objection and answering it, permits an argument to continue
moving forward while taking into account points or reasons opposing either the
train of thought or its final conclusions. Often the objections are standard
ones. Example: It is usually argued
at this point that if the government gets out of the mail delivery business,
small towns like Podunk will not have any mail service. The answer to this can
be found in the history of the Pony Express . . . .
Distinctio
is an explicit reference to a particular meaning or to the various meanings of
a word, in order to remove or prevent ambiguity. Example: To make methanol for twenty-five cents a gallon is
impossible; by "impossible" I mean currently beyond our technological
capabilities.
Amplification
involves repeating a word or expression
while adding more detail to it, in order to emphasize what might otherwise be
passed over. In other words, amplification allows you to call attention to,
emphasize, and expand a word or idea to make sure the reader realizes its
importance or centrality in the discussion. Example: This orchard, this lovely, shady orchard, is the main
reason I bought this property.
Aporia
expresses doubt about an idea or conclusion. Among its several uses are the
suggesting of alternatives without making a commitment to either or any. Example: I am not sure whether to side
with those who say that higher taxes reduce inflation or with those who say
that higher taxes increase inflation.
Eponym
substitutes for a particular attribute the name of a famous person recognized
for that attribute. By their nature eponyms often border on the cliche, but
many times they can be useful without seeming too obviously trite. Finding new
or infrequently used ones is best, though hard, because the name-and-attribute
relationship needs to be well established. Example:
Is he smart? Why, the man is an Einstein. Has he suffered? This poor Job can
tell you himself.Analogy compares two things, which are alike in several respects, for the purpose of explaining or clarifying some unfamiliar or difficult idea or object by showing how the idea or object is similar to some familiar one. While simile and analogy often overlap, the simile is generally a more artistic likening, done briefly for effect and emphasis, while analogy serves the more practical end of explaining a thought process or a line of reasoning or the abstract in terms of the concrete, and may therefore be more extended. Example: The beginning of all evil temptations is inconstancy of mind, and too little trust in God. For as a ship without a guide is driven hither and thither with every storm, so an unstable man, that anon leaveth his good purpose in God, is diversely tempted. The fire proveth gold, and temptation proveth the righteous man. --Thomas a Kempis
Antimetabole: reversing the order of repeated words or phrases (a loosely chiastic structure, AB-BA) to intensify the final formulation, to present alternatives, or to show contrast. Example: Ask not what you can do for rhetoric, but what rhetoric can do for you.
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