This rhetoric-and-reader textbook teaches college students to develop critical reading, writing, and thinking skills for self-defense in the contentious arena of American civic rhetoric. This edition is substantially updated for an era of renewed tensions over race, gender, and economic inequality-all compounded by the escalating decibel level and polarization of public rhetoric.

Readings include civil rights advocate Michelle Alexander on "the new Jim Crow," recent reconsiderations of socialism versus capitalism, Naomi Wolf's and Christine Hoff Sommers' opposing views on "the beauty myth," a section on the rhetoric of war, and debates on identity politics, abortion, and student debt.

Designed for first-year or more advanced composition and critical thinking courses, the book trains students in a wealth of techniques to locate fallacies and other weaknesses in argumentation in their prose and the writings of others. Exercises also help students understand the ideological positions and rhetorical patterns that underlie opposing views, from Ann Coulter to Bernie Sanders. Widely debated issues of whether objectivity is possible and whether there is a liberal or conservative bias in news and entertainment media, as well as in education itself, are foregrounded as topics for rhetorical analysis.



Autorentext

Donald Lazere is Professor Emeritus of English at Cal Poly State U, San Luis Obispo. He has written or edited six other scholarly and text books on argumentative rhetoric and the politics of education, media, and literature. He has also published widely on these topics in scholarly journals as well as in opinion columns and book reviews for journalistic periodicals such as the Washington Post, New York Times, and Los Angeles Times.

Anne-Marie Womack is a Professor of Practice and former Director of Writing at Tulane University. She's the creator of the award-winning AccessibleSyllabus.com, a guide to universally designing educational documents. Her articles appear in College Composition and Communication, Composition Forum, Pedagogy, and Hybrid Pedagogy, among others. Currently, she is co-authoring a book on inclusive college classrooms with Lauren Cardon.



Inhalt

Contents

Preface to Teachers and Students

Acknowledgments

Part I: Introduction

Chapter 1: An Appeal to Students

English as a Survival Skill

The Tradition of Education for Critical Citizenship

Mario Savio, "An End to History" / Young America Foundation Website

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Chapter 2: Good Arguments

A Good Argument is Well-Supported

A Good Argument Verifies Facts and Expresses Informed Opinions

A Good Argument Questions Hidden Premises

A Good Argument is Relevant, Consistent, and Avoids Fallacies

A Good Argument Effectively Refutes Opposing Arguments but is Fair-Minded and Qualified

Analysis, Synthesis, and Judgments

Style and Tone, Eloquence and Moral Force

Conclusion

Argument Analysis Checklist

Bryan W. Van Nord, "The Ignorant Do Not Have a Right to an Audience"

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Chapter 3: Definitions and Criteria of Critical Thinking

Critical Thinking and Cultural Literacy

Making Connections and Creating Dialogue in Critical Thinking and Literature

Walt Whitman, "A Noiseless, Patient Spider."

Recursion, Cumulation, and Levels of Meaning

Drawing the Line and Establishing Proportion

Recognizing Complexity and Reading Between the Lines

Irony and Paradox

James Baldwin, "My Dungeon Shook"

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Chapter 4: Semantics in Rhetoric and Critical Thinking

Denotation and Connotation

Definition and Denotation in Argument

Connotation in Argument: "Cleans" And "Dirties"

Euphemism

Abstract and Concrete Language

Unconcretized Abstractions

Literal and Figurative Language

Summary: Applying Semantic Analysis

A Semantic Calculator for Bias in Rhetoric

George Lakoff, "Framing the Issues." Mary Ann Glendon, "When Words Cheapen Life."

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Chapter 5: Writing Argumentative Papers

Prewriting

Writing

Postwriting

Locating and Evaluating Sources

A Model of The Writing Process In A Student Paper

Naomi Wolf, from The Beauty Myth / Christina Hoff Sommers, "The Backlash Myth"

Part II: Attaining an Open Mind: Overcoming Psychological Blocks to Critical Thinking

Chapter 6: From Cocksure Ignorance to Thoughtful Uncertainty: Viewpoint, Bias, and Culturally Conditioned Assumptions

Relativism and Commitment

Biased and Unbiased Viewpoints

Acknowledge Your Own and Opposing Viewpoints

Rogerian Argument, Believers and Doubters

Culturally Conditioned Assumptions and Centrisms

Totems and Taboos

Ethnocentrism

American Ethnocentrism

Phallocentrism

Other-Centrisms

Virginia Woolf, from A Room of One's Own, Pamela Druckerman "The Perpetual Panic of American Parenthood" / Rebecca Traister, "Fury is a Political Weapon. And Women Need to Wield It"

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Chapter 7: Overgeneralization, Stereotyping, and Prejudice

Prejudice

Class Prejudice

The Role of Corporations

Reverse Prejudice

Stephanie Salter, "An Unexpected Education at St. Anthony's" / Michelle Alexander, "Introduction to The New Jim Crow" / Donald Barlett and James Steele, "Life on the Expense Account"/Robert Jensen, "Anti-Capitalism in Five Minutes"

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Chapter 8: Authoritarianism and Conformity, Rationalization

and Compartmentalization

Paddy Chayevsky, from Network

Rationalization and Compartmentalized Thinking

Double Standards and Selective Vision

Other Defense Mechanisms

George Orwell, from 1984 / Katha Pollitt, "On the Merits"/ David French, "End the Double Standards in Reporting Political Violence"

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Part III: Elements of Argumentative Rhetoric

Chapter 9: Some Key Terms in Logic and Argumentation

Deductive and Inductive Arguments

Implications and Inferences

Setting the Agenda

Tone and Style

Polemics

Ground Rules for Polemicists

P. J. O'Rourke, "Closing the Wealth Gap" / "Opposing Arguments on Abortion"

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Chapter 10: Fallacies

Glossary of Fallacies

Mark Lilla, Interviewed by Sean Illing. 'This Professor Set Off a War of Words over 'Identity Politics.' We Debated Him.

Topics for Discussion and Writing

Chapter 11: Causal Analysis

Causal Fallacies

What's the Matter with Higher Education?

Wayne Davis, "UT Knoxville's $1.7 Billion Impact Only a Fraction of Our Contribution"/Laurence Biemiller, "Over 20 years, State Support for Public Higher Education Fell More than 25 Percent"/ Adolph Reed, Jr., From "Majoring in Debt"/ Joseph Palermo, "Starving the Beast: The Battle to Disrupt and Reform America's Public Universities. A Film Written and Directed by Steve Mims"/ Rick Lowry, "Where's the Misery?"/ Richard Vedder, "Student Loan Debt: Time for Radical Reform"

Topics for Discussion an…

Titel
Reading and Writing for Civic Literacy
Untertitel
The Critical Citizen's Guide to Argumentative Rhetoric, Brief Edition
EAN
9781351689038
Format
E-Book (pdf)
Veröffentlichung
19.05.2021
Digitaler Kopierschutz
Adobe-DRM
Anzahl Seiten
338