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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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Research Paper Undergraduate
Three Musketeers by Alexandre Dumas
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Paper Undergraduate
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Online collaboration software such as Cisco's Web Ex, Microsoft Office Live, Google documents, and dimdim.com are changing the nature of rhetoric. Online collaboration software enables asynchronous as well as real-time…
Paper Undergraduate
Interview and Resume Preparation
Interview/Resume/Cover Letter Preparation
Research Paper Undergraduate
Julien Donkey-Boy Harmony Korine\'s Julien
Harmony Korine's Julien Donkey-Boy is a famous example of a recent film that has attempted to challenge the hegemony of traditional filmmaking by subverting the rules via technical means.
Paper Undergraduate
Frankenstein and the nature of human creation
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Paper Undergraduate
Film reviews and critical analysis
This film has been lauded as innovative and groundbreaking in terms of cinematic art. It is also referred as director Stanley Kubrick's masterpiece in terms of concept and cinematography.
Research Paper Undergraduate
Approaches to English grammar
¶ … English Grammar: "Letter from Birmingham Jail" by Martin Luther King Jr.
Research Paper Undergraduate
James Joyce\'s Dubliners by James
Dubliners by James Joyce believe that in composing my chapter of moral history in exactly the way I have composed it I have taken the first step towards the spiritual liberation of my country."
Paper Undergraduate
Postmodern rhetoric and its applications
Postmodern Rhetoric and "An Inconvenient Truth"
Paper Undergraduate
Letter From a Birmingham Jail
Throughout Martin Luther King's Letter from a Birmingham Jail, the author develops the concept of distinguishing just laws from unjust laws. In that regard, Dr. King relied primarily on logos as a rhetorical tool to lay…