What is the typical state of mind of those who experience these emotions? That is, what do you imagine are the basic feelings that, when combined, give rise to those emotions?

The Pathetic Appeal in King Henry’s “Band of Brothers” Speech

The following speech is taken from Shakespeare’s play, Henry V (Henry the Fifth). Here, the army of King Henry is preparing to face the forces of France, who vastly outnumber his own dwindling forces. In order to check on the morale of his troops, Henry has disguised himself as a common soldier to move among his men and eavesdrop on their conversations. He learns that they are very much afraid and that some of them wish to break ranks and run. One of his generals, the Earl of Westmorland, cries out that he wishes they had another 10,000 soldiers so that it would at least be a fair fight. At that moment, Henry throws off his disguise and presents the following speech, chock-full of pathetic appeal, in order to invoke the particular emotions that will prepare his men for the bloody fight against a superior force. Henry’s army will win this battle, which will be decisive and end the war with victory going to England. This speech, Shakespeare implies, was instrumental in securing Henry’s victory over the full might of the French army.

Your assignment is first of all to identify the particular emotions Henry invokes and then to discuss the particular way in which he invokes them. For this second task, ask yourself

A) What is the typical state of mind of those who experience these emotions? That is, what do you imagine are the basic feelings that, when combined, give rise to those emotions?

B) What vivid images associated with those feelings does Henry paint in the minds of his men? And C) towards whom are each of these emotions directed?

(Assignment length: approximately 300 words)

“Band of Brothers” Speech
from Henry V by William Shakespeare

WESTMORELAND. O that we now had here
But one ten thousand of those men in England
That do no work to-day!

Rubric
Journal Rubric
Journal Rubric
Criteria Ratings
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeFocus
Journal establishes and sustains a narrow focus on the particular Rhetorical elements at work in the reading selection as assigned.
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeDevelopment
Thesis is well supported with examples from the reading selection. Analysis is accurate, reflects an understanding of the reading, and is as detailed as the word count allows. The elements of rhetorical theory assigned in the corresponding unit are used to generate genuine insight into the piece of literature being examined.
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeStyle
An advanced level of written fluency is demonstrated. Writing not only clearly express thoughts, but employs the resources of sentence-structure and vocabulary to refine and arrange those thoughts.
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeResearch and Documentation
Essay distinguishes ideas of the author from the ideas of other writers. Paraphrase, quotations, citations and formatting are compliant with MLA conventions of documentation.
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeMinimum Requirements
To be awarded credit towards the completion of this course, assignment must meet the required word count, not be plagiarized, and/or excessively weak in Focus, Development, Documentation and/or Style.

Explain how exactly he does that. Make sure you discuss both forms of ethos in your Journal Assignment.

Journal 2

In the speech below, identify any remarks that make either of the two forms of Ethical Appeal discussed in our lecture note for unit

2. Does this speaker establish his practical wisdom, his commitment to principles, and his sense of altruism?

If so, what does he say to make these qualities apparent? Does he appear to take account of the values, desires, fears, or prejudices of his audience?

Explain how exactly he does that. Make sure you discuss both forms of ethos in your Journal Assignment.

(Assignment length: approximately 300 words)

Alan Isaacman (Edward Norton) is the lawyer with the dubious honor of representing Larry Flynt, the infamous pornographer. In local and federal court (eventually in the Supreme Court) Isaacman is at pains to make convincing arguments that Flynt’s Hustler Magazine should not be censored. He uses a mixture of logical and ethical appeals, but given the unsavoriness of Hustler Magazine, it’s the ethical appeals that give him the most trouble and that are therefore the most interesting.

How does one “ethically” defend a porn king? That’s what you’re going to explain in detail in this assignment.

But there is a price for that freedom, which is that sometimes we have to tolerate things that we don’t necessarily like. So go back in that room where you are free to think whatever you want to think about Larry Flynt and Hustler magazine. But then ask yourselves if you want to make that decision for the rest of us. Because the freedom that everyone in this room enjoys is in a very real way in your hands. And if we start throwing up walls against what some of us think is obscene, then we may very well wake up one morning and realize that walls have been thrown up in all kinds of places that we never expected. And we can’t see anything or do anything. And that’s not freedom. That is not freedom. So, be careful. Thank you.

LECTURE NOTE UNIT 2
Defining Ethos

Ethos is simply Greek for “good character,” and if speakers and writers can show it, their arguments will become more appealing to their audiences. But how exactly does one go about demonstrating it?

 

But what exactly constitutes “good character”? Aristotle’s Rhetoric actually presents two different takes on this question – two different versions of Ethos.

Aristotle’s First Version of Ethos –
The Charming Appeal of YOUR OWN Good Character

In the opening paragraphs of Book Two of Aristotle’s Rhetoric (Chapter 2.1 in the Penguin edition), Ethos refers explicitly to the good character of the speaker insofar as this character is demonstrated over the course of a rhetorical performance. Again, this doesn’t really have to do with making references to one’s good reputation for having behaved ethically in the past. What matters for Aristotle here is that the argument one is currently making and the language on chooses should actively demonstrate one’s good character. That doesn’t mean one ought to brag about past achievements. Only what you say or write on the current occasion of your argument matters as you establish your ethical character. How do you establish good character and make it appealing to your audience. Your argument itself must suggest that you possess the three qualities that, taken together, define a person of good character:

Practical expertise or common-sensical know-how (phronesis)
The will-power (arête) that enables one to stick to one’s principles in adversity
Altruism, a willingness to act for the “wellbeing or happiness of others” (eunoia), even if this means sacrificing your own interests
Practical expertise is something that can be demonstrated over the course of an argument by revealing that you really do know what you’re talking about. Demonstrate that you are aware of other conclusions besides the one you are arguing in favor of. Point out the virtues and pitfalls of the reasoning of your opponents. Show (rather than tell) your audience that you have “hands-on” experience in dealing with the subject on which you are speaking. Talk the talk and walk the walk.

Will-Power means having the strength to adhere to one’s principles. But what exactly are principles?

Principles are the elements of a personal code of conduct that you have chosen to adopt. Rather than stating that you are principled in some sense (e.g., that you are a good Christian, a good Muslim, or a good Jew), simply state a particular principle that you are committed to and point out how your argument somehow serves that principle. Leave religion out of it, because some of your audience may not belong to your particular religion or subscribe to your ethical code in its entirety. But many ethical principles cross religious lines and are therefore of a more general appeal. For example, pretty much everyone values principles like courage, honesty, and loyalty. Invoke a principle like one of these and suggest that your argument is motivated by that principle. Here you are suggesting that your own will-power (that it, your arête) demands that you take the position that you are taking. You are implicitly suggesting that your audience – to the extent that they share your principles – is ethically obliged to adopt the same position as you.

Altruism is a commitment to act on behalf of the common good, even or especially when such action goes against your own personal interests. You can demonstrate this by pointing out how your argument will somehow benefit your audience. You can really drive the point home if you point out how you, personally, will not necessarily benefit from it.

Ideally, your presentation will include subtle suggestions that you possess all three of these elements of character. In practice, however, sometimes writers or speakers will only touch on one or two of these elements. But by touching on all three, and by touching on them repeatedly, the appeal of your character will grow stronger. But don’t overdo it or you might come off as being too full of yourself. Stay focused more on your argument and simply implant clues, little pieces of evidence, that you possess these three elements of good character.

Aristotle’s Second Version of Ethos –

Appeal to the Particular Character of One’s Audience on a Given Occasion

Later on in Book Two of Aristotle’s treatise on rhetoric (Section Seven, chapter 2.12 in the Penguin edition), he discusses another sense of Ethos. Here he advises one to look at the character of the audience and tailor one’s arguments to appeal to those kinds of people one is addressing on a particular occasion. Essentially this amounts to constructing a profile of the audience. Are they mostly young people, middle-aged people, or elderly people? Are they mostly wealthy people, middle-class people, working-class people, or unemployed people? Are they aristocrats, leading citizens, or commoners? This section of Aristotle’s treatise looks carefully at those three categories (age, economic status, and social status) and presents long lists of topics and attitudes that you might wish to include in your arguments for each type of audience. For example, regarding younger audiences (audiences who are mostly below the age of 30), Aristotle points out that they are preoccupied with sex, that they are easily angered by any sense that they have been slighted, and that they are generally optimistic. (Note how these characteristics pertain to the youth of today as much as to the youth of ancient Greece!)

Although Aristotle’s treatise only profiles audiences in terms of their age, wealth, and social status, modern rhetoricians have extended this audience-profiling Technique to include such categories as race, nationality, gender, and sexual orientation. If you are addressing an audience made up mostly of married women, certain arguments may work better than others in your presentation. Your job in making an ethical appeal is to figure out which arguments will be especially appealing to that audience and which ones will fall flat with them. Knowing what that audience values, what it despises, what it fears, and what it desires is crucial here. You want to associate yourself with the things your audience values and desires – and you may even want to associate your opponents with the things your audience despises and fears for good measure. The important thing is that you make yourself, your on-stage character, as appealing as possible for THIS PARTICULAR audience.

In addition to selecting the right arguments for your presentation, tone and diction are also of crucial importance. The key to making this kind of ethical appeal is making a connection to your audience. You want to appear to be one of them, or at least someone who really understands them. So you’ve got to sound scholarly to an audience of scholars, hip to an audience of hipsters, and nerdy to an audience of nerds.

In analyzing this kind of ethical appeal within a presentation, you’ve got to know a little something about the audience an author happens to be addressing on the occasion of his or her presentation. Let’s say you’re looking at a speech that was given to a group of American military recruits. What do you know about the general profile of this audience? They’re all Americans, mostly men, mostly under the age of 30, and mostly scared silly.

From General George S. Patton’s Speech to the Third Army

Below are the introductory remarks from a longer speech given by General George S. Patton to a group of raw recruits who are about to go into combat in WWII. This speech was actually a shortened and slightly cleaned up version of the colorful speech Patton actually delivered. The speech is somewhat famous still, and George C. Scott (the actor portraying General Patton in this film, won the Academy Award for his powerful portrayal.

Note how Patton uses the above profile to appeal to this audience. His speech will appeal to the values of the American way of life because he is addressing Americans. It will appeal to manliness because he is addressing men. It will appeal to youthfulness, because his audience is young—and because Patton is much older than these men, he’ll appeal to these young guys, not be attempting to appear youthful, but by trying to seem paternally concerned with his advice. And his speech will appeal to his audience’s fear by addressing it and by showing that he understands it.

From General George S. Patton’s Speech to the Third Army

Men, this stuff that some sources sling around about America wanting out of this war, not wanting to fight, is a crock of bullshit. Americans love to fight, traditionally. All real Americans love the sting and clash of battle.

You are here today for three reasons. First, because you are here to defend your homes and your loved ones. Second, you are here for your own self respect, because you would not want to be anywhere else. Third, you are here because you are real men and all real men like to fight. When you, here, every one of you, were kids, you all admired the champion marble player, the fastest runner, the toughest boxer, the big league ball players, and the All-American football players. Americans love a winner. Americans will not tolerate a loser. Americans despise cowards. Americans play to win all of the time. I wouldn’t give a hoot in hell for a man who lost and laughed. That’s why Americans have never lost nor will ever lose a war; for the very idea of losing is hateful to an American.

You are not all going to die. Only two percent of you right here today would die in a major battle. Death must not be feared. Death, in time, comes to all men. Yes, every man is scared in his first battle. If he says he’s not, he’s a liar. Some men are cowards but they fight the same as the brave men or they get the hell slammed out of them watching men fight who are just as scared as they are. The real hero is the man who fights even though he is scared. Some men get over their fright in a minute under fire. For some, it takes an hour. For some, it takes days. But a real man will never let his fear of death overpower his honor, his sense of duty to his country, and his innate manhood.

How do we use the “Results Summaries” to describe which app features need special attention by the developers? What is the biggest question that a user of your proposed app might ask?

———-Beginning week three of summer term 2021 (session 3) we will begin major paper #2—the Investigative Research Project (IRP) report.
Footer information included with every Writing PROMPT:

Su2021-Wr 327-Baunach—ZOOM Office Hours Thursday Review/consult

Recommendation:  review the NST rubric—Canvas file# 017-Module-1-Wr327-S2021-ASSIGNMENT-6-Final-NST-draft-100pts-due-Fri02Jul-at-1159PM
Recommendation: Also Review “How to get an ‘A’ on your Instruction Manual Paper,” Canvas file#005, page 6.

How do we use the “Overviews” to introduce our instructions?

Keeping your 3 screens with linkages to a web site in mind, think of your app as a guide for users.

The users want to know something when they launch your app:

What is the biggest question that a user of your proposed app might ask?

—–In the case of the Rainwater Resource Tour of OSU, the biggest question the user might ask would be:

“What are rainwater resources at OSU and where are they located?”

This biggest question is addressed in an Overview.

How do we use the “Results Summaries” to describe which app features need special attention by the developers?

Remember, software development projects often run-out of time and budget and are forced to cut-back on the scope of the project, so details need to be provided in the results summaries—dear developers: don’t forget these important details!

—–Imagine that the users of your app learn something new—what details might your app users learn after exploring your app?

—–In the case of the Rainwater Resource Tour of OSU, users learn, for example, the building names and street addresses of all four of the rainwater-collection tanks on the OSU Campus.

These details are included in a Results Summary.

“015-Module-1-Wr327-Su2021-Graded-DISCUSSION-5-Big-Question-plus-Details-5pts-due-Wed30Jun-at-1159PM”

For Graded DISCUSSION-5, reply to the DISCUSSION thread with a paragraph that is approximately 250-words long.

This paragraph should include a topic sentence.

(Advice for writing a paragraph with a topic sentence: 1) Write down the content of your paragraph first; and 2) then go back and make sure that your first sentence fully introduces your content.)

Imagine the Planet Argon software (SW) developers as your audience and describe the following:

1) Provide a descriptive name for your app—so we can understand its function.

2) What is the biggest question that a user of your app might ask? (Overview content)

3) What details might your app users learn after exploring your app? (Results Summary content)

 

Graded-DISCUSSION-5, here is the outline that  would use to create my 250-word paragraph for the Rainwater Resources Tour

Descriptive App Name: Rainwater Resource Tour of OSU-Corvallis. 2)

What are rainwater resources at OSU and where are they located? 3)

Example of details provided by App: Building names with street addresses for all four of the rainwater-collection tanks on the OSU Campus.

5 “016-Module-1-Wr327-Su2021-Graded-ASSIGNMENT-5-NST-OverviewsResultsSummaries-5pts-due-Wed30Jun-at-1159PM”

For ASSIGNMENT 5,  consider revising the following Overviews/Results Summaries— make certain that a) one of your NST Overview sections addresses the biggest question that a user of your app might ask, and b) that one of your NST Results Summary sections addresses specific details that users might learn.Page 2 Overview of the GUI (Graphic User Interface):Page 4 Overview for Developers regarding integration testing:Page 3 Results Summary for the GUI:
Page 5 Results Summary for Developers regarding integration testing:When you are satisfied that your two Overviews and your two Results Summaries address a) the biggest question that a user of your app might ask, and b) address specific details that the user of your app might learn, then  upload (one more time) a complete draft of all five pages of your NST (Instruction Manual) to Canvas.

 

Explain propaganda and how your created example matches the purpose of propaganda. In other words, tell me what propaganda is, what its purpose is, and then explain why your creation is propaganda.

Create a piece of propaganda for Ender’s society to encourage a specific character to support or stop the war.

The format of your Propaganda is for you to determine: videos, posters, etc. are all welcomed genres.

Your example of propaganda must reflect elements of propaganda discovered during your research.

Your example of propaganda must reflect an understanding of the novel.

Your example must include ethos, logos, and pathos.

The project must be in MLA format and include in-text citations (parenthetical citations), and a Works Cited page for any evidence used from the novel or your research.

Explain propaganda and how your created example matches the purpose of propaganda. In other words, tell me what propaganda is, what its purpose is, and then explain why your creation is propaganda.

The presentation needs to explain your project: detail why it is an example of propaganda and how ethos, logos, and pathos are created in the project.

What strengths do you see in your writing? What weaknesses? How will you build on or work on these as you continue drafting your assignment?

Before you revise your assignment, you should review the peer responses that you received in

last week’s peer review discussion board. Decide what your next steps will be for revising your

assignment, and develop a brief revision plan that outlines those steps.
Be thoughtful and specific.

Use this as an Opportunity to articulate your goals and processes for
writing the assignment.

You’re welcome to write this plan in paragraph format, a bulleted or
numbered list, or an outline.

Whichever form you choose, be sure to address the following
questions:

1. Were you surprised or confused by any comments you received? Explain, including a
discussion of how you resolved any issues.2. How will you respond to peer comments and suggestions? Ultimately, the assignment is
yours; however, if you choose not to follow particular suggestions, you should use the
revision plan at least to acknowledge them and explain why you are choosing to go in adifferent direction.3. What strengths do you see in your writing? What weaknesses? How will you build on or
work on these as you continue drafting your assignment?4. Any final thoughts to close out your revision plan assignment?
Revision plans should be about a half-page (double-spaced) and no more than one page. Post to
the revision plan assignment dropbox by Sunday (by end of day).

Identify the skills, qualifications, and experience levels required for positions in intended career?

Job Announcement

After reading the related module content and Career Center website material, locate a job you are/will be interested in.

1. A copy of the job announcement (copy/paste into your document; don’t just include a link, as these sometimes expire before the module is complete or require an account to access)

2. A list of the skills and qualifications you have that relate to what they’re looking for.

This should be a bullet-point list (not full sentences or paragraphs).

As you think about your skills and qualifications, think Broadly; you can draw from lots of different kinds of experience, including:

o Work history
o Education
o Projects
o Extra-curricular activities

• Do not include your resume (or portion of your resume) for #2.

This should be a list of skills and qualifications written specifically in relation to the position in #1.

• Remember to include the word count (for #2 only) at the top of the document.

Learning Objectives
This assignment is designed to advance the following learning objectives:
Module Student Learning Objectives

• Implement effective job search strategies
• Identify the skills, qualifications, and experience levels required for positions in intended career