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14 Cards in this Set

  • Front
  • Back
situation in which language can be used to solve a situation; ability to communicate need
rhetorical situation
the urgancy, the situation that demands your response. Example: child dies in an accident, so mom starts mothers against drunk driving
exigence
anyone affected by occurence or anyone that can affect change
audience
adaptations. adapt language, how to dress for the situation. speaking to friends as opposed to speaking to board of execs.
constraints
reason for the speech
occasion: includes special events, academic courses, professional meetings, and civic/community meetings
to question things. ability to distinguish fact from opinion, identify the underlying
assumptions or premises on which a speaker’s argument rests, evaluate the
soundness of the arguments and reasoning employed in persuading, assess the
credibility of sources in evaluating testimony, and separate reasoned arguments
from emotional appeals.
critical thinking.
active involvement in community
life and social issues
civic engagement
activity of speaking
or writing to civic audiences in arguing for policies aimed at
addressing these issues.
public advocacy
ethos, pathos, and logos
aristotelian thinking
logic; appeals
to our thinking, reasoning, and inference-making capabilities.
logos
empathy, sympathy
pathos
the audience's perception of you; credibility
ethos
asks the audience to believe or do something
persuasion
incentive to do something that requires time and effort
motivation