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Rhetoric
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Rhetoric is the study of how language is used to persuade, inform, and influence audiences, and it sits at the center of communications, English, political science, and philosophy curricula. Its academic interest lies in the tension between language and reality, form and meaning, power and reason. Students engage with foundational questions about what makes an argument effective and how speech shapes public life. Core thinkers and frameworks that appear across coursework include Aristotle's definition of rhetoric, Plato's critique of false rhetoric as it relates to democracy, Foucault's contributions to rhetoric and ideology, and the competing positions of Bitzer and Vatz on how rhetorical situations are constructed.

Papers on this topic take several distinct approaches. Some are historically oriented, tracing classical and modern rhetorical theory to compare how ideas about persuasion have evolved. Others focus on close analysis of specific texts or speeches, such as Carmichael's Black Power speech or George Orwell's political writing, using rhetorical frameworks to examine how language and power operate together. Additional papers explore rhetoric within specific domains — religion, education, and political ideology — while others work through theoretical debates about the relationship between knowledge and rhetoric or the role of rhetorical education in shaping civic life.

A strong essay on rhetoric grounds its thesis in a clear claim about how a specific use of language achieves — or fails to achieve — a persuasive effect. Evidence drawn from the text, speech, or theoretical framework under analysis carries the most weight. The most common pitfall is treating rhetoric as merely a list of devices; effective essays instead connect those devices to broader questions of audience, power, and meaning.

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Dyskolos the Play\'s Genre Plays
Plays written after the death of Alexander the Great in 323 B.C. were generally termed as the New Comedy. Menander's Dyskolos, having been written and played in 317-316 B.C. may therefore belong to the New Comedy genre.
Essay Masters
Drama Analysis Dr. Faustus and Streetcar Named Desire
The paper considers Marlowe's Faust and Williams' Blanche DuBois in terms of the "everyman" concept. The idea of "everyman" is described and discussed, after which it is applied to both characters. The suggestion is that both characters are "everyman" representations of their respective time periods, but can also translate as such characters for today's audiences.
Paper Undergraduate
Shakespeare\'s Sonnet 138 the Sonnet
The sonnet is one of the most rigid poetic forms to be commonly used, and William Shakespeare is one of the undisputed masters of the English sonnet. He was far from the first poet to achieve greatness in this form,…
Paper Doctorate
Sons of Gods? In Genesis
In Genesis 6:2 (King James Version), it is written that, "The sons of God saw the daughters of men that they [were] fair; and they took them wives of all which they chose." To determine who the sons of God were in this…
Research Paper Doctorate
The future of Cuba
Cuba is an island nation some 90 miles from Florida, and proximity alone gives this country great importance in the thinking of American leaders. More than this, however, Cuba represents a major loss in the Western…
Paper Undergraduate
UN Peacekeeping Limitations After Five
After five decades of international conflict, waged between the imperial champion of the communist ideology and the frontrunner for western democracy, the latter prevailed in the peaceful revolution of 1989.
Paper Doctorate
United States and Iran Demonize
The relationship between the United States and Iran is possibly at its worst in decades. Official diplomatic connections are essentially none existent and there is great hesitancy to have this altered.
Essay Doctorate
History of the Media in America Media
Media incorporates mediums such as advertisements, magazines, newspapers, radio, television, and now -- the Internet. According to the Oxford English Dictionary, it was only in the 1920s that people began to actually…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Media and Politics the Relationship
The relationship between the media and politics is one that goes back to the early days of print. Today, the relationship has evolved to one that causes the public to sometimes question who is in charge; the media or…
Research Paper Undergraduate
Kenneth Burke\'s New Rhetoric Kenneth
Kenneth Burke's theory of the "new rhetoric" - in which he saw culture as a kind of language of contextual symbols, the "symbolic construction of social reality" - is the topic of scholarly debate and discussion even…