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Pathos
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Pathos is one of the three classical modes of persuasion, alongside ethos and logos, and refers to the use of emotional appeal to move an audience. It appears across literature, rhetoric, composition, and communication courses because understanding how writers and speakers engage feeling is central to analyzing almost any text. Students encounter pathos when examining how an intended audience is positioned to sympathize, fear, grieve, or feel inspired — responses that shape how arguments are received and how meaning is made in both literary and persuasive contexts.

The papers archived here approach pathos through several distinct lenses. Rhetorical analysis is the most common framework, with students examining how emotional appeal works alongside ethos and logos in speeches, essays, advertisements, and literary texts. Works like Martin Luther King Jr.'s "Letter from Birmingham Jail" and Virginia Woolf's "Professions for Women" serve as frequent primary sources, as do magazine advertisements and poems. Some papers focus on tone and attitude in poetry, while others take a comparative or evaluative approach, weighing how effectively different texts deploy emotional strategies to reach their intended audiences.

A strong essay on pathos grounds its claims in specific textual evidence — particular word choices, images, narrative moments, or structural decisions that produce emotional effects in the reader. The thesis should move beyond simply identifying that pathos is present and instead argue how it functions and why it matters for the text's larger purpose. A common pitfall is treating emotional appeal as mere manipulation; the stronger move is to analyze pathos as a deliberate, craft-driven response to audience, context, and argument.

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Paper High School
General concepts and applications
Whether he is lauded or scorned, both proponents and opponents must agree that President Obama, or his speech writers, must be commended for their rhetorical writing ability. Whether it was for his election campaign,…
Essay Doctorate
MLK One of the Most Famous Public
This 4-page paper presents a thorough and thoughtful analysis of the speech by Martin Luther King, Jr. entitled "I Have a Dream." The speech is discussed in terms of its historical context as well as its rhetorical merit.
Paper Masters
Conceptual art: history, principles, and contemporary practice
¶ … art analysis: Landscape with the Fall of Icarus by Pieter Brueghel
Paper Undergraduate
Yiddish song and the Jewish experience
¶ … lyrics evoke the challenges of the period, and specific challenges that they allude to: gender expectations, poverty, and emigration
Paper Undergraduate
Michael Pollan in 2006, Published
Michael Pollan in 2006, published a work that has to some degree changed the way that people eat, or at the very least attempted to change the way that we think about the food we eat.
Paper Doctorate
Materialism and the American Dream in The Great Gatsby
The American Dream is the promise of a better life that brought people from all over the world to the newly discovered continent so that they could populate it and contribute to the development of the land and of their personal lives too. The concept of the American Dream still continues to attract immigrants from countries in Europe, Asia and Africa including North and South America even after more than 400 years. However, the interpretation of the American Dream has changed over the centuries and many people have come to the country with their own expectations of well-being and success. During the early days of settlement, immigrants from Europe were welcomed to create a new life for themselves and for their families. They were attracted by the promise of getting land on which to farm and build a home for their families. The loneliness and loss of tradition was an acceptable price to pay to escape religious and economic persecution in the old country.
Paper Undergraduate
Neo-Aristotelian Criticism in September 2005,
This essay examines Jane Fonda's 2005 keynote speech at the Women & Power conference from the perspective of Neo-Aristotelian criticism. By analyzing Fonda's speech according to the five canons of rhetoric, one is able to see how seemingly problematic details do not detract from the persuasive ability of the speaker. The essay demonstrates the centrality of context to any rhetorical analysis, because the environment of the speech and the specific audience often are as important, if not more so, than the speaker herself.
Paper Undergraduate
Strength of Women
The post World War II American family as portrayed in film and on television belied the strength of the American woman. Americans were inundated with images of families that existed purely on the pages of film and…
Paper Doctorate
African Slave Trade -- Equiano\'s
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano
Research Paper Undergraduate
Thoreau Rhetorical Analysis Henry David
Henry David Thoreau's essay entitled Walking is a short essay about a walk and the importance walking plays in the human psyche. The essay itself is told as a spiritual meandering as Thoreau takes a walk through the…