Text and Context Rhetorical Analysis Basics. Con-text: “Con”= “with”

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Text and Context Rhetorical Analysis Basics

Transcript of Text and Context Rhetorical Analysis Basics. Con-text: “Con”= “with”

Page 1: Text and Context Rhetorical Analysis Basics. Con-text: “Con”= “with”

Text and Context

Rhetorical Analysis Basics

Page 2: Text and Context Rhetorical Analysis Basics. Con-text: “Con”= “with”

Con-text: “Con”= “with”

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Context= “with the text”

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What text do you expect?

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The context suggests the “text”

STOP

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The text is merely the word “stop.”

STOP

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Simple rhetorical analysis

• The TEXT = “STOP”

• The CONTEXT = a sign

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More in depth rhetorical analysis

• The word “stop” holds a meaning.

• The author’s purpose is clear.

• The medium is a sign.• It is a formal sign

• But where is it published?

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Compare…

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What is this sign doing?

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Let’s try a more complicated sampleDo you recognize this image?

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RJ Matsonhttp://politicalhumor.about.com/od/barackobama/ig/Barack-Obama-Cartoons/

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Taylor Jones

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Nick Anderson http://politicalhumor.about.com/od/barackobama/ig/Barack-Obama-Cartoons/

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Shepard Fairey is perhaps most famous for the Obama campaign posters he created, and is one of the best known and most influentual street artists.http://grevillea.wordpress.com/2009/03/29/shepard-fairey-at-the-ica-boston/

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Questions you can ask:• Who is the cartoonist?• What is their typical sympathy for the characters represented in this

cartoon?• What paper is this published in?• What is their leaning? Liberal? Conservative? Moderate?• What is the text?• What event does it refer to?• Who are the other characters?• What does the emotion imply?• How is color used?• Is there sarcasm/ parody/ realism etc?• More interestingly… is there any subtext that explains why so many

people are parodying this one piece of art?

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Quote:

• The Associated Press thinks it’s copyright infringement, and they’re really going after me. It would bankrupt me entirely if they won, so I’m hoping, for the sake of creative expression and political speech, that that doesn’t happen.—Shepard Fairey

• http://www.interviewmagazine.com/art/shepard-fairey/2/

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Shepard Fairey guilty of Plagiarism…?http://paidcontent.org/article/419-judge-in-ap-shepard-fairey-fair-use-suit-suggests-settlement/

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New questions arise

• Sometimes digging into the background of a cartoon can turn up something WAY more interesting than you thought.

• Can some commentary about the court case have a bearing on the way that you look at these parodies in the cartoons?

• What social commentary is it that the cartoon was so popular as to be so frequently drawn?

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Look beyond the picture

Look into the context