Pathos is described as emotional appeals that “are powerful tools for influencing what people think and believe” (p. 30). “Goodbye, Columbus: Ohio’s War on the Middle Class” is an article written by Mac McClelland telling a story about the downfall of the middle class in Ohio around 2011. The story immediately starts off describing the house and the guest room that the writer will be staying in while visiting his friends and developing this story. The description of the room indicates, by the décor of the guest room, that the couple that owns the house has not had the money to paint and update the pink walls and previous owner’s name “Katie” which is marked all over the walls. Starting off with this description lays the groundwork of the pathos throughout the story.…
During the past couple of months we have seen more and more well known establishment Republicans like Lindsey Graham, George Pataki, and Bill Kristol, proclaim their refusal to support Donald Trump if he were to secure the GOP presidential nomination. Now that Trump has done just that, political pundits from every news site, cable channel, and talk radio show seem all but obsessed with revealing the next Republican mainstay who will give the cold shoulder to Trump, and may even commit conservative blasphemy by voting for Hillary Clinton. Almost daily, we hear another report of lifelong Republicans jumping the sinking ship that was once "The Grand Old Party". Whether it be both George Bush Junior and Senior opting out of even attending this…
Political cartoons during the late 19th century Gilded Age revealed, on a large scale, key issues at stake throughout the era. These drawings flourished in the 1860s due to advances in new technology of mass circulation and because people of all kinds; young, old, black, white, educated, illiterate could interpret the intense meaning from the artists. Cartoonists emerged by the names of Thomas Nast from Harper’s Weekly, Joseph Kepper of Puck, Frank Beard, Eugene Zimmerman, Grant Hamilton, etc. Most of these illustrators rose to the occasion to bring down the infamous Boss Tweed, who in 1861 begun his formation of the New York County Courthouse costing around 13 million dollars. City officials with a grudge against William M. Tweed provided…
However, even within this tame political arena, Democrats still identified strongly with their candidates and rooted intensely for them, and vice versa for Republicans. Although past electorates were undoubtedly just as zealously partisinal as contemporary voters, the political polarization seen today is unlike the partisanship of the past. Transitioning from an age of high politics, American Congressmen, in recent years, have no longer been unified by the external threat of the Soviet Union (or any serious international threat for that matter); instead of debating foreign policy, domestic issues have filled the gap. Now free to debate every manner of domestic issue, party lines have become more concrete, leading to an excavation of the center of the bell curve and a decline in ‘across the aisle’ mingling. In contrast to prior decades, it was enthusiastic partisanship for their candidate (and by extension, their party) rather than having fundamentally incompatible beliefs that fueled their pious…
Each chapter has maps and illustrations of things that are hard to visualize as well as images of artifacts that have been discovered over the years. These aid the reader in visualizing what she is describing in the text. For instance, she discusses figurines that were placed in or around homes and villages for protection purposes. Throughout the text, she describes these figurines in detail and then provides an image of a mud hippo in Figure 7.1 so that the reader can see exactly what she is talking about (Szpakowska 126). In other places, she provides maps of the area in which she is describing as well as illustrations of things she is describing but does not have an image of.…
Should Summer Heights High be used to teach satire? Intro: Satire is a form of comedy, a way of creating humour by using criticism, exploitation and exaggeration in order to get a reaction from the audience. this is to make them think of political or social issues in a way that's eye opening and Confronting. The show Summer Heights High uses these techniques in many ways which helps develop the show and characters.…
Picture books have been around for a long time. They have been read by many generations as a source of pleasure reading and to tap into their imagination. In these books, the writers and illustrator include various language, narrative and visual conventions to appeal to the reader and make them read with a deeper analytical eye to find the intended meaning. While some picture books are simple and the meaning is straightforward others are more complex and metaphorical. An example of such a picture book is Gary Crew and Steven Woolman’s…
Within the first minutes of his 1966 State of the Union address, President Lyndon B. Johnson proposed a four-year term for officials elected to the House of Representatives (“The Harvard Crimson”). While plausible in discussion now, Johnson’s audience likely viewed his idea, deliberately placed at the opening of the annual speech, as unrealistic nonsense. To the purist, the Constitution and the guidelines set out for the nation have remained, and should remain, intact. In a Crimson article responding to the speech, published in same year, the author argues that expansion of term length “will provoke reverberations of the old Jeffersonian belief that frequent elections are the best guarantee against tyranny.” To the author, a member of the audience Johnson’s proposal was intended for, starting a conversation Johnson meant to inspire, the ‘60s were “an age of mass communications and sophisticated means of sampling public opinion……
On the issue of our nation’s debt, Congress has traditionally placed limits, often referred to as a ceiling, on the amount of national debt in dollars the country can accumulate. Before Congress’s passing of the Second Liberty Bond Act during the First World War, Congress would have to painstakingly approve each and every individual case of the Treasury Department issuing more debt. With the increased governmental spending demands brought about by two World Wars and the New Deal, Congress passed the Act to simplify the process of amassing debt by instead setting an overall dollar limit on the national debt. This new mechanism simplified the spending process, and helped ensure fiscal responsibility of the federal government. However, this changed…
Standardization testing has been around since the 1960s to prove the knowledge each student has. Tests such as the SAT and the ACT which will determine your college education, career, and future. As well as the state testings, under the ruling of the No Child Left Behind act, that decides how much funding a school get based on how the students are taught and how much they learned. However, these types of tests have huge negative impacts on students lives and futures. Many teachers, students, and parents have tried to address these issues regarding testing to society.…
The cartoon depicts a baby that is meant to be Canada standing on its own with an older woman commonly known as ‘Mother Britannia’, who is meant to represent the British Empire. There is also an older gentlemen that is commonly known as ‘Uncle Sam’, which is a common national personification of the American government or the United States in general. The text underneath the cartoon has the women saying “See, the dear child can stand alone!”, while ‘Uncle Sam’ says “Of course he can! Let go of him Granny; if he falls I’ll catch him!” The cartoon depicts how Canada was becoming more and more independent, and while England believes Canada is ready enough to be independent.…
Samuel L. Jackson once said, “We’ve come a long way in our thinking, but also in our moral decay.” This quote holds true today as society stays rapidly changing and people become more and more desensitized to the horrors of the world. The line between right and wrong fades and turns to a larger gray area, and many things that happen in society today make us question how we, as a collective people, ended up where we are and how we acquired the customs we have today. Aldous Huxley, in his novel Brave New World, uses a great deal of satire and exaggeration to express his concerns for the society he was born into and bring attention to the problems of moral decay, drug dependency, and brainwashing, among other things, in the world.…
One of the biggest problems in the U.S. today is illegal immigration. This topic seems to split U.S. citizens because lots of views are completely different. One popular view that is often misconceived thinks America hates immigrants and wants to deport them all. The opposing popular view thinks immigrants are root of our problems and cause all the trouble lately. Whether you have a different view than these or not illegal immigration needs to come to an end.…
Teen’s death was a tragedy born of hatefulness I was puzzled and saddened by the story of 13-year old Megan Meier that Leonard Pitts wrote in his Sunday commentary in the Columbus Ledger-Enquirer. The parents of an ex-girlfriend of Megan, who lived a few doors away, created a MySpace page and kept sending messages to Megan using the name of a fictitious cute boy called Josh Evans. After befriending Megan and calling her pretty, Josh unexpectedly broke up with Megan and kept sending her mean and hateful messages. He had also been sharing her messages with the online community; describing her as a “fat slut.” In his last hateful message, Josh told Megan that she was a bad person, everybody hated her and the world would be better without her.…
Nowadays, the novel as a piece of satire is a very powerful artistic form to critique human behaviors and social actions (LeBoeuf, 2007). In this essay, it analyze the novel of satire from three aspects. In the first section, it present the main content about Animal Farm and discuss how does animal farm satirize modern society. In the second section, it explain how the satire works by analysing other examples(. And how satire deal with the serious issues will be discussed in the final part.…