Tuesday, August 30, 2016

Protest Object Paper Assignment

Rhetorical Analysis of a Protest Object

Dates:
September 1: Website posts by 10 PM
September 7: Website comment with object choice by 10 PM
September 15: Rough draft posted to website and D2L dropbox by 8 PM
September 21: Response to group members’ drafts posted to website by 3 PM
September 26: Revision plan due as a comment on your draft by 10 PM (we’ll spend time on this in class on the 21st and 26th)
September 29: Final draft posted to website and D2L dropbox by 8 PM


Assignment Details: This assignment is worth 15% of your final course grade

For this assignment, you’ll be asked to perform a rhetorical analysis on a protest artifact (text, image, song, etc.) that is working to represent a particular identity. The analysis will address the artifact’s rhetorical situation (audience, context, purpose) and the rhetorical strategies (ethos, pathos, logos) it uses to achieve its purpose. The analysis should be 1000-1300 words and use proper MLA citation format (see Purdue’s online writing lab, https://owl.english.purdue.edu/owl/, for a guide to MLA style). Feel free to come to office hours at any step in the writing process if you have questions about your work.

The assignment has three parts: a set of post to our class website, an explication of the artifact’s rhetorical situation, and an analysis of its rhetorical strategies.

1. Posts with possible objects for analysis: 20% of final grade for the assignment

You’ll submit three separate posts to the course website under “Topics.” (I’ll go over how to do post to the site in class). Each post should have two labels: “Topics” and “[your name].” Be sure to use the label for your name you created during the first week of class.

Each of your posts will contain one possible object for analysis and an explanation of the object’s context. See my sample post about Citizen for a model; basically, you’ll give a representation of the protest and then answer the questions who/what/where/when/why in order to give us a sense of what you think it’s about, and include a note on the identity or identities with which the object is concerned.

Your posts need to include a range of protests: of the three posts, at least one should cover a protest/event prior to 1990, at least one post-1990, and at least one should have originated outside the United States. (You may hit both of these categories with the same post.) You may also not duplicate any of your classmates exact objects, so keep the website open as you work on this. (This is an incentive to get to work on this sooner than later: the earlier you post, the fewer options will already be taken.)

Your three posts should also include at least two different types of object. Possible artifact types include, but are not limited to: slogans, speeches, photographs, songs, instances of protest or body rhetoric, poems, short stories, advertisements, monuments, memorials, websites, essays, news articles, short biographies or autobiographies, short clips from a TV show or documentary, reports of community or political initiatives, social media accounts that can be viewed publicly. Basically, anything that you can claim functions as an act or protest, and that is small enough to cover thoroughly in 1000 or so words (no complete protest movements, full books, or entire films please).

Grade for the posts will be based on:
1) whether you’ve successfully posted to the website and used labels (20%)
2) whether you’ve chosen appropriate objects (30%)
3) whether you’ve clearly explained the objects’ context (50%)

2. Rough Draft (30% of final paper grade)
You’ll post a complete rough draft of the paper to the website tagged with the labels “Rhetorical Analysis Project,” “rough drafts,” and your name. Rough drafts must be full length and contain a properly formatted Works Cited in MLA style (see above). Take a look at the rubric at the end of this sheet to see how I’ll be evaluating rough drafts, and be cognizant that incomplete drafts tend to fare poorly.  

3. Final draft (50% of final paper grade)
By midnight on March 7, you’ll upload your final draft of the paper to the D2L dropbox and the course website, using the labels “Rhetorical Analysis Project,” “final drafts,” and your name. Final drafts should incorporate my feedback and your group members feedback in the ways we’ll discuss when we start workshopping.

Paper Organization
Your paper will have two main parts: an explication of rhetorical situation and an analysis of rhetorical strategies.

In the explication of the rhetorical situation, you will use evidence from the object itself to explain 1) who the intended audience is, 2) what the relevant contexts for understanding it are, 3) what purpose it is trying to achieve, and 4) how the object is related to the identity you’ve chosen. Your analysis of purpose should include what you take to be its goals with respect to the identity you see the object as trying to shape/examine/articulate. You might not do these in this exact order; depending on what you’re analyzing, it may be easier to start with purpose and then talk about audience and context. Organize however it seems most effective to you. Assume that your audience is, roughly, our class: a group of people generally interested in protest movements but perhaps not familiar with your particular protest.

In the analysis, you’ll discuss how the creator(s) of your artifact use Ethos, Pathos, and Logos to achieve the purpose you’ve found in the explication. (You do not necessarily need to organize this section by these three terms, but you should use the terms in your analysis.) The thesis of this section should state the creator(s)’ purpose, which identity that purpose is tied to, and a list of strategies the creator(s) use to achieve that purpose. Strong analyses will conclude with an assessment of how effective the object was in achieving its purpose, either rhetorically or historically.

Grading Rubrics: your drafts will be graded on the following criteria.
Rough Draft
Explication: Explication persuasively and clearly                                  
outlines identity, audience, context, and purpose                                                /9
Analysis: Analysis persuasively and clearly analyzes
the artifact’s ethos, pathos, and logos                                                      /9
Organization: Logically organized with a
clear thesis in the analysis section                                                                      /5
Grammar/sentence structure: prose is clear,
grammatically correct, and effectively conveys
meaning                                                                                               /3       
Works Cited: Draft includes a properly formatted works cited               /3
Labels: Draft is labeled correctly on website                                         /1
Total:                                                                                                    /30

Final Draft (50 points):
Scope of revisions:
revisions were a sufficient response
to feedback from Dr. Brown and classmates, targeted
issues raised in feedback                                                                                   /6
Clarity of revisions: Revisions added substance and
clarity to the paper, targeted issues raised effectively                               /6
Explication: Explication persuasively and clearly                                  
outlines audience, context, and purpose                                                 /12
Analysis: Analysis persuasively and clearly analyzes
the artifact’s ethos, pathos, and logos                                                      /12
Organization: Logically organized with a
clear thesis in the analysis section                                                                      /5
Grammar/sentence structure: prose is clear,
grammatically correct, and effectively conveys
meaning                                                                                               /5       
Works Cited: Draft includes a properly formatted works cited               /3

Labels: Draft is labeled correctly on website                                         /1

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