Rhetorical Appeals By: Sierra Marker, Angela Silva, Madison Baker

Description

Mind Map on Rhetorical Appeals By: Sierra Marker, Angela Silva, Madison Baker, created by maddiebakerr on 13/11/2013.
maddiebakerr
Mind Map by maddiebakerr, updated more than 1 year ago More Less
angelasilva
Created by angelasilva over 10 years ago
sierramarker
Copied by sierramarker over 10 years ago
maddiebakerr
Copied by maddiebakerr over 10 years ago
maddiebakerr
Copied by maddiebakerr over 10 years ago
sierramarker
Copied by sierramarker over 10 years ago
maddiebakerr
Copied by maddiebakerr over 10 years ago
29
2

Resource summary

Rhetorical Appeals By: Sierra Marker, Angela Silva, Madison Baker
  1. Pathos 1: "Being mechanical, you ought not walk" (I.i.3).
    1. Pathos 2: "I hear a tongue, shriller than all the music" (I.ii.16).
      1. Pathos 3: "Be factious for redress of all these griefs" (I.iii.18).
        1. This example is pathos because it has an emotional tone and narratives of emotional events.
        2. This is an example of pathos because it has a vivd description of the noise.
        3. This is an example of pathos because it uses figurative language and has a connotative meaning.
        4. Ethos 1: "Beware the ides of March" (I. ii. 23).
          1. Ethos 2: "He is a dreamer. Let us leave him" (I. ii. 24).
            1. Ethos 3: "Fear him not, Caesar, he's not dangerous" (I. ii. 196).
              1. This is an example of ethos because Antony is telling Caesar to not fear, and Caesar trusts Antony because of the fact that they are dear friends.
              2. This is an example of ethos because Caesar tells everyone to leave the soothsayer, and they all do because they trust Caesar as a reliable and trustworthy source.
              3. This is an example of ethos because the soothsayer is trying to persuade Caesar of being careful of the ides of March, but does not intend to do any harm.
              4. Logos 1: "The fault, dear Brutus, is not in our stars" (I. ii. 140).
                1. Logos 2: "I was born free as Caesar, so were you" (I. ii. 98).
                  1. Logos 3:"Let me have men about me that are fat" (I. ii. 192.).
                    1. This is logos because it is logical to surround yourself with larger men for safety.
                    2. This is and example of logos because it can be translated into something logical, that we were all born into the same world and that we were all born equally.
                    3. This is an example of logos because it is logical to think that fault is not in our stars but in our actions instead.
                    Show full summary Hide full summary

                    Similar

                    Quiz Geral
                    miminoma
                    06 PROJECT TIME MANAGEMENT
                    miguelabascal
                    SAT Math Sample Questions
                    SAT Prep Group
                    Biology AQA 3.2.5 Mitosis
                    evie.daines
                    AQA GCSE Biology Unit 2.3
                    Matthew T
                    Key Biology Definitions/Terms
                    courtneypitt4119
                    Prueba de Integrales
                    José William Montes Ocampo
                    World War I
                    Lydia Klein
                    2PR101 1.test - 8. část
                    Nikola Truong
                    1PR101 2.test - Část 10.
                    Nikola Truong
                    Specific topic 7.6 Timber (processes)
                    T Andrews