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9780205308859

Reading Rhetorically

by ; ;
  • ISBN13:

    9780205308859

  • ISBN10:

    0205308856

  • Format: Paperback
  • Copyright: 2002-01-01
  • Publisher: Longman
  • View Upgraded Edition

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Summary

This aims-based rhetoric and reader teaches students analytical reading, academic writing, and inquiry as the keys to success in college. @BULLET = Part I, " Reading Rhetorically, " includes an in-depth discussion of analytical reading" and shows students how skilled academic readers construct the meaning of a text. @BULLET = Part II, " The Rhetorical Reader as Writers, " provides an overview of academic writing, the role of reading in research, and writing from sources: " summary, paraphrase, direct quotation, and citation practices. @BULLET = Parts II follows the evolution of a student writing project as the student moves from summary to rhetorical analysis to researched critique of a reading." Ideal for individuals in developing critical reading and writing skills.

Table of Contents

Thematic Contents xix
Preface xxv
Part One: Reading Rhetorically
Your Life as a Reader
3(10)
Exploring Your Reading Life
4(1)
Taking Stock of Why You Read
5(1)
For Writing and Discussion
5(2)
Summary
7(1)
Scenes of Reading
7(6)
A Brief Writing Project
Option 1: Memories
Option 2: Observations
Option 3: Interviews
7(2)
The Writing Life
9(1)
Gloria Naylor
Reading on the Fourth of July
10(2)
Virginia Chappell
A Lawyer and His Reading
12(1)
Melissa Martinie
The Special Demands of Academic Reading
13(14)
Reading as Conversation
14(2)
For Writing and Discussion
16(1)
Challenges Presented by Academic Reading
17(1)
Rhetorical Reading as an Academic Strategy
18(1)
Questions That Rhetorical Readers Ask
19(1)
Writers' Purposes Versus Readers' Purposes
20(1)
A Further Look at Writers' Purposes
21(5)
Expressing and Reflecting
22(1)
Inquiring and Exploring
22(1)
Informing and Explaining
22(1)
Analyzing and Interpreting
23(1)
Taking a Stand
23(1)
Evaluating and Judging
24(1)
Proposing Solutions
25(1)
Seeking Common Ground
25(1)
Summary
26(1)
Strategies for Reading Rhetorically
27(18)
Reading and Writing as Acts of Composing
27(2)
The Voice You Hear When You Read Silently
29(1)
Thomas Lux
For Writing and Discussion
29(2)
Texts and Their Rhetorical Contexts
31(1)
An Extended Example: Articles About Teenagers' Sleep Habits
31(1)
For Writing and Discussion
32(2)
Learning From the Practices of Experienced Readers
34(2)
Building a Context for Reading
35(1)
For Writing and Discussion
36(3)
Matching Strategies with a Text's Genre
37(1)
Matching Strategies with Purpose for Reading
38(1)
Taking Stock of How You Read
39(1)
For Writing and Discussion
39(1)
Summary
40(5)
Sources of the Article Excerpts About Teenagers' Sleep Patterns
41(4)
Part Two: Reading and Responding to Texts
Listening to a Text
45(24)
Writing as You Read
46(1)
Preparing to Read
47(4)
Identifying Your Purpose
47(1)
Recalling Background Knowledge
48(1)
Reconstructing Rhetorical Context
48(2)
Spot Reading
50(1)
For Writing and Discussion
51(1)
Listening as You Read Initially
52(4)
Noting Organizational Signals
53(1)
Marking Unfamiliar Terms and References
53(1)
Identifying Points of Difficulty
53(1)
Annotating
54(2)
For Writing and Discussion
56(1)
Listening as You Reread
56(3)
Mapping the Idea Structure
56(2)
Descriptive Outlining
58(1)
For Writing and Discussion
59(5)
Composing a Summary
59(2)
Jenny's Process Notes for Writing a Summary
61(1)
Jenny's Summary
61(1)
Checklist for Evaluating Summaries
62(1)
Writing a Rhetorical Precis
62(1)
Structure of a Rhetorical Precis
63(1)
Jenny's Rhetorical Precis
63(1)
Summary
64(1)
A Brief Writing Project
64(5)
Who Cares If Johnny Can't Read?
65(4)
Larissa MacFarquhar
Questioning a Text
69(22)
What It Means to Question a Text
69(1)
Strategies for Questioning a Text
70(1)
Examining a Writer's Credibility
70(1)
For Writing and Discussion
71(3)
Examining a Writer's Appeals to Reason
71(1)
Claims
72(1)
Reasons
72(1)
Evidence
73(1)
Assumptions
73(1)
Examining a Writer's Strategies for Engaging Readers
74(1)
For Writing and Discussion
74(2)
Examining a Writer's Language
75(1)
For Writing and Discussion
76(3)
Examining a Text's Ideology
77(2)
For Writing and Discussion
79(1)
Exploring Your Responses to a Text
80(1)
Before/ After Reflections
80(1)
For Writing and Discussion
81(2)
The Believing and Doubting Game
81(1)
Jenny's Believing-Doubting Game Freewrite
81(2)
Interviewing the Author
83(1)
Jenny's Interview Questions
83(1)
Applying Rhetorical Reading Strategies: An Example
83(4)
Jenny's Assignment to Examine Rhetorical Strategies
84(1)
Jenny's Paper: Who Cares If the Value of Books Is Overstated?
84(3)
For Writing and Discussion
87(1)
Summary
87(4)
Part Three: The Rhetorical Reader as Writer
Writing About Reading: The Special Demands of Academic Writing
91(18)
Overview of Part Three
92(1)
Typical Reading-Based Writing Assignments Across the Curriculum
93(5)
Writing to Understand Course Content More Fully
93(1)
In-Class Freewriting
94(1)
Reading or Learning Logs
94(1)
Double-Entry Notebooks
94(1)
One-Page Response Papers or Thought Pieces
94(1)
Writing to Report Your Understanding of What a Text Says
95(1)
Writing to Practice the Conventions of a Particular Type of Text
96(1)
Writing to Make Claims About a Text
97(1)
Writing to Extend the Conversation
98(1)
Asserting Your Authority As a Reader and Writer
98(1)
Seeing Writing As a Process of ``Putting in Your Oar''
99(8)
Strategies for Getting Started
100(1)
Strategies for Generating Ideas
101(1)
Strategies for Writing a First Draft
102(1)
Strategies for Evaluating Your Draft for Revision
103(1)
Strategies for Peer Response and Revision
103(1)
Tips for Offering Feedback to Others
104(1)
Tips for Using Feedback to Revise
105(1)
Strategies for Editing and Polishing Your Final Draft
105(2)
Summary
107(2)
Using Rhetorical Reading to Conduct Research
109(14)
Choosing Readings
110(7)
Jenny's Assignment to Extend the Conversation
111(1)
Formulating Questions: Know What You're Looking For
111(1)
Question Analysis
112(1)
Clarifying Your Purpose
113(1)
Prompts for Questions Analysis
113(1)
Excerpts from Jenny's Research Log
114(1)
Discerning Purpose in Potential Sources
115(2)
For Writing and Discussion
117(1)
Evaluating Potential Sources
117(4)
Library Databases and Web Search Engines
117(1)
Questions About Relevance
118(1)
Questions About Currency and Scope
119(1)
Questions About Authors and Experts
119(1)
Questions About Publishers and Sponsors
120(1)
More Excerpts from Jenny's Research Log
121(1)
Summary
122(1)
Making Knowledge: Incorporating Reading into Writing
123(24)
Summary, Paraphrase, and Direct Quotation
124(5)
Using Summary
124(1)
Using Paraphrase
125(2)
Using Direct Quotation
127(2)
For Writing and Discussion
129(1)
Avoiding Plagiarism
130(2)
Attributive Tags
132(2)
Citation Conventions
134(6)
Formats for In-Text Citations
136(1)
Placement Guidelines
136(1)
Page Number Guidelines
137(1)
Author and Title Guidelines
137(3)
Summary
140(1)
Incorporating Reading into Writing: An Example
140(7)
Part Four: An Anthology of Readings
Expressing and Reflecting
147(62)
Questions to Help You Read Expression and Reflection Rhetorically
149(57)
In Case You Ever Want to Go Home Again
151(1)
Barbara Kingsolver
``I've never gotten over high school, to the extent that I'm still a little surprised that my friends want to hang out with me.''
151(8)
Language
159(10)
Kyoko Mori
``In Japanese, I don't have a voice for speaking my mind.''
Black Swans
169(15)
Lauren Slater
``When I'm living in moments of clarity, have I transcended disease, or has disease transformed me, taught me how to live in secret niches?''
keeping close to home: class and education
184(11)
bell hooks
``To a southern black girl from a working-class background who had never been on a city bus, who had never stepped on an escalator, who had never travelled by plane, leaving the comfortable confines of a small town Kentucky life to attend Stanford University was not just frightening; it was utterly painful.''
A Word with the Boy
195(6)
David Updike
``The whole thing evolved so quietly, so peaceably, that I wasn't prepared to put a stop to it.''
Reflection as Knowledge
201(5)
Heidi Steenburg
``I needed to find a way to tell the story, to tell what happened to the homeless people, to tell what happened to me.''
Writing to Express and Reflect
206(3)
Reflecting on Experience
206(1)
Examining Rhetorical Strategies
206(1)
Extending the Conversation
206(3)
Inquiring and Exploring
209(46)
Questions to Help You Read Explorations Rhetorically
210(43)
Singing with the Fundamentalists
212(9)
Annie Dillard
``What are they singing?... I want to join them....I want to take my stand with them, for I am drawn to their very absurdity, their innocent indifference to what people think.''
Testing the Limits of Tolerance as Cultures Mix
221(4)
Barbara Crossette
``How do democratic, pluralistic societies like the United States, based on religious and cultural tolerance, respond to customs and rituals that may be repellent to the majority?''
Witness to Rage
225(11)
Robert McGuire
``We know little about what happens to children who witness domestic violence. In fact, we know more about the effects violent television shows have on children.''
Bitch
236(9)
Beverly Gross
``What is the male equivalent of the word bitch, I asked the class. `Boss,' said Sabrina Sims.''
Mommy, What Does ``Nigger'' Mean?
245(4)
Gloria Naylor
``And building from the meanings of what we hear, we order reality.''
Seeking Answers to the Question of Divorce
249(4)
Joshua D. McColough
``I sink into the couch in our family room. Aunt Peggy and Uncle Max are separated. What about our traditional fondue dinner on New Year's Eve? The weekends up at the lake?''
Writing to Inquire and Explore
253(2)
Exploring a Question That Puzzles You
253(1)
Examining Rhetorical Strategies
253(1)
Extending the Conversation
253(2)
Informing and Explaining
255(82)
Questions to Help You Read Informative and Explanatory Texts Rhetorically
258(97)
How Come?
259(4)
Kathy Wollard
Mirage Isn't a Figment of Your Imagination
``Soon you realize you can chase that patch of water down the highway all day and never catch it.''
That Funny and Embarrasing Hiccup May Actually Be Helpful for Your Body
``...if they go on too long, hiccups are no fun. Which is why there are so many hiccup `cures' floating around.''
Once a Novelty, Now-Essential Credit Card Turns 50
Marcy Gordon
```Children, dogs, cats and moose are getting credit cards,' Federal Reserve Chariman Alan Greenspan recently told the Senate Banking Committee.''
263(5)
UC Berkeley Wellness Letter, Why Do Those #*@! ``Experts'' Keep Changing Their Minds?
``Science is a process, not a product, a work in progress rather than a book of rules.''
268(7)
Sleep Schedules and Daytime Functioning in Adolescents
275(24)
Amy R. Wolfson
Mary A. Carskadon
``Students with short school-night sleep reported increased levels of depressed mood, daytime sleepiness, and problematic sleep behaviors in comparison to longer sleepers.''
When a Wet Vac Counts More Than a Ph.D.
299(3)
Paul Irgang
``Those of us who work in academe inhabit an unofficial, yet undeniable, caste system.''
Body in Trouble
302(6)
Nancy Mairs
``Disability is at once a metaphorical and a material state, evocative of other conditions in time and space---childhood and imprisonment come to mind---yet `like' nothing but itself.''
Helping and Hating the Homeless
308(14)
Peter Marin
``The point is to try to illuminate some of the darker corners of homelessness, those we ordinarily ignore, and those in which the keys to much that is now going on may be hidden.''
America's Love Affair with Pizza: A Guilty Pleasure No More
322(4)
Thomas Roepsch
``Every pizza lover knows the guilt associated with devouring a greasy pizza straight out of the box...''
Consent (Fiction)
326(29)
C.J. Hribal
``This kid, though, nobody knows what happened to this kid. But edging over the ravine, conscious of where his feet meet the ravine's crumbling muddy edge and conscious, too, of the child's drowned body a few feet behind him, Porter can guess.''
Writing to Inform and Explain
355
Explaining What You Know
335(1)
Examining Rhetorical Strategies
335(1)
Extending the Conversation
336(1)
Analyzing and Interpreting
337(54)
Questions to Help You Read Analysis and Interpretation Rhetorically
339(50)
The Past in the Present: The Life of Memorials
340(9)
Kirk Savage
``Why lavish time and money on monuments, especially if `true' memory indeed resides elsewhere?''
I Shop, Ergo I Am: The Mall as Society's Mirror
349(5)
Sarah Boxer
``In certain academic circles, `shop till you drop' is considered a civic act.''
Toys
354(3)
Roland Barthes
``Current toys are made of a graceless material, the product of chemistry, not of nature.''
The Lesson (Fiction)
357(7)
Toni Cade Bambara
``Back in the days when everyone was old and stupid or young and foolish and me and Sugar were the only ones just right, this lady moved on our block with nappy hair and proper speech and no makeup.''
Waste Is Good
364(11)
Geoffrey Miller
``Why would evolution produce a species of anthropoid ape that feels it simply must have the Sennheisers, when the Vivancos would stimulate its ears just as well?''
Men, Women, Sex, and Darwin
375(10)
Natalie Angier
``[H]ard-core evolutionary psychologists have got a lot about women wrong.''
Rebellion Through Music
385(4)
Heather Wendtland
``Why did we love entertainers and songs we knew we should hate?''
Writing to Analyze and Interpret
389(2)
Offering an Interpretation
389(1)
Examining Rhetorical Strategies
389(1)
Extending the Conversation
390(1)
Taking a Stand
391(58)
Argument and Public Life
392(1)
Why Should You Agree? Claim, Reason, Evidence, and Assumption
393(3)
What's Really at Issue?
396(4)
What Kind of Question Is at Issue? Using Stasis Categories for Argument Analysis
397(3)
Questions to Help You Read Arguments Rhetorically
400(46)
Web Pages for the Million Mom March and Second Amendment Sisters Rally, May 2000, Marching For and Against Guns and Gun Controls
401(4)
About Face
405(1)
Kathleen Parker
For Starters, We Can Require Trigger Locks
405(1)
``Any adult who leaves a weapon around for a young child to take to school is negligent, no yes-buts.''
Revisiting the Issue of Trigger Locks
406(3)
``Quick, somebody sell me a bridge over the Sahara before I grow a brain.''
Is There Other Intelligent Life in the Universe? An Exchange of Letters
409(7)
Arnold Wolfendale
Seth Shostak
``No,'' says Wolfendale, a British physicist and former Astronomer Royal. ``Yes,'' says Shostak, who works for the SETI Institute in California
Statement by Alabama Clergymen and Letter from Birmingham Jail
416(1)
Martin Luther King Jr.
Statement
416(2)
Alabama Clergymen
``We are convinced that these demonstrations are unwise and untimely.''
Letter from Birmingham Jail
418(13)
``You deplore the demonstrations taking place in Birmingham. But your statement, I am sorry to say, fails to express a similar concern for the conditions that brought about the demonstrations.''
Let Gays Marry
431(3)
Andrew Sullivan
``People ask us why we want the right to marry, but the answer is obvious. It's the same reason anyone wants the right to marry.''
Should a Boy Be Expelled for Thought Crimes?
434(4)
Sallie Tisdale
``Why would anyone, especially an educator, be surprised to find out that an American high school boy thinks about murder?''
A Hanging (Fiction)
438(5)
George Orwell
``In some of [the cells] brown, silent men were squating at the inner bars, with their blankets draped round them. These were the condemned men, due to be hanged within the next week or two.''
Good Intentions in the Anti-Sweatshop Movement
443(3)
Sofia Collins
``Much of the denim and khaki I wear was probably sewn by outsourced workers in developing countries under conditions that violate most U.S. health and safety standards.''
Writing to Take a Stand
446(3)
Taking a Stand of Your Own
446(1)
Examining Rhetorical Strategies
446(1)
Extending the Conversation
447(2)
Evaluating and Judging
449(42)
Questions to Help You Read Evaluative Texts Rhetorically
453(36)
Invention Is the Mother of Necessity
454(5)
Jared Diamond
``[F]orget those stories about genius inventors who perceived a need of society, solved it single-handedly and transformed the world.''
A Perfect Set of Teeth
459(3)
Alison Lurie
``The zipper is probably the only clothes fastener to have been the star of a Broadway song.''
Words Go Right to the Brain, but Can They Stir the Heart?
462(5)
Laurence Zuckerman
``Powerpoint is so popular that in many offices it has entered the lexicon as a synonym for a presentation, as in `Did you send me the Powerpoint'.''
The Morality and Metaphysics of Email
467(3)
Michael Kinsley
``Historians looking back on our time, I suspect, will have no doubt that the arrival of email was a good thing.''
Web Sites Dedicated to Being Simple Without Giving Up Affluence
470(3)
Joe Queenan
``Simplicity has evolved into a secular religion for affluent Americans in recent years.''
The Addictive Spectacle of Maternal Reality
473(4)
Joyce Millman
```A Baby Story'... is like childbirth porn---complete with unflattering lighting, sometimes muddy sound, and decidedly nonprofessional stars.''
En Garde, Princess!
477(6)
M. G. Lord
``If I were Barbie, the 11-and-a-half-inch princess who has dominated the doll world since 1959, I would keep an eye on the newly formed SWAT team of action figures known as Get Real Girls...[And] I would watch my bony little back.''
Barbie-Q (Fiction)
483(3)
Sandra Cisneros
``Every time the same story. Your Barbie is roommates with my Barbie, and my Barbie's boyfriend comes over and your Barbie steals him, okay? Kiss Kiss Kiss.''
Through the Looking Glass
486(3)
Rhonda Downey
``[T]hroughout America's history the media has often misconstrued the cultural images of its minorities, particularly African Americans.''
Writing to Evaluate and Judge
489(2)
Making an Evaluation
489(1)
Examining Rhetorical Strategies
489(1)
Extending the Conversation
489(2)
Proposing Solutions
491(40)
Questions to Help You Read Proposals Rhetorically
493(36)
The Need for Environmental Ethics
495(4)
Anthony Weston
``We are beginning to struggle with the intimation that something is seriously wrong with our relation to the natural world. It is a little like suspecting cancer but not wanting to know.''
Why a Prime Model for Saving Rain Forests Is a Failure
499(5)
John F Oates
``In the last 20 years, the size of tropical rain forests---and the number of animals in them---has declined drastically although money for conserving those forests has become more plentiful.''
The Singer Solution to Wrold Poverty
504(6)
Peter Singer
``I'm saying that you shouldn't buy that new car, take that cruise, redecorate the house or get that pricey new suit. After all, a 1,000 suit could save five children's lives.''
Clinical Research---What Should the Public Believe?
510(6)
Marcia Angell
Jerome P Kassirer
``Health-conscious Americans increasingly find themselves beset by contradictory advice.''
The Case for Allowing Kidney Sales
516(6)
Janet Radcliffe-Richards
``When the practice of buying kidneys from live vendors first came to light some years ago, it aroused such horror that all professional associations denounced it, and nearly all countries have now made it illegal.''
Binge Drinking as a Substitute for a ``Community of Learning''
522(4)
Kenneth Bruffee
``To stem the tide of binge drinking, colleges have tried closing fraternities and sororities, punishing heavy drinkers, enlisting the help of liquor-store owners, and banning alcohol on their campuses. So far, those efforts have largely failed.''
Consider the Study of Peace
526(3)
Kathryn Sipiorski
``Peace is a passive force achieved only by active minds.''
Writing to Propose a Solution
529(2)
Proposing a Solution
529(1)
Examining Rhetorical Strategies
529(1)
Extending the Conversation
529(2)
Seeking Common Ground
531(48)
Questions to Help You Read Rhetorically About Common Ground
533(43)
The Triumph of the Yell
534(4)
Deborah Tannen
``I put the question...: `Why do you need to make others wrong for you to be right?' Her response: `It's an argument!' That's the problem.''
Fight Fierce but Fair: And Practice at Home
538(4)
Sydney Callahan
``Let's keep the home fires burning for the greater good of the body politic.''
From Conflict to Congruence
542(8)
Aida A. Michlowski
``As it continues to grow in acceptance, conflict resolution may yet become `the fourth R' in basic education.''
The Anthropology of Abortion Activism
550(5)
Faye Ginsburg
``I felt that the abortion debate needed the kind of research that anthropologists and other qualitative social scientists undertake: studies that try to understand people as part of a community, getting to know them over time and in context....''
What Should Be Learned Through Service Learning?
555(6)
Michael X. Delli Carpini
Scott Keeter
``At first blush, the learning of political facts would seem far removed from the goals and approaches most centrally identified with either the service learning movement or current thinking about effective classroom instruction.''
Open Letter from Mel White to Jerry Falwell
561(5)
Mel White
``Has it ever crossed your mind that you might be just as wrong about homosexuality as you were about segregation?''
Aaron the ``Wiggah''
566(4)
Salim Muwakkil
``Aaron wasn't my first white student to display hip hop leanings....''
Public Libraries and Internet Filters: Protection Versus Access
570(6)
Jenny Trinitapoli
``At the heart of this controversy are serious values issues about decency, safety, and freedom of information---and the role of government in guaranteeing all of the above to its citizens.''
Writing to Seek Common Ground
576(3)
Moving Toward Common Ground
576(1)
Examining Rhetorical Strategies
576(1)
Extending the Conversation
577(2)
Appendix: Building a Citation 579(18)
Basic Guidelines for Works Cited Lists
579(1)
Citation Formats for Books
580(4)
Citation Formats for Articles in Periodicals
584(5)
Citation Formats for World Wide Web Sources
589(3)
Citation Formats for Other Materials and Media
592(5)
Credits 597(6)
Index 603

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