Unveiling Persuasive Strategies in Atticus' Closing Argument

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Explore the comprehensive analysis of persuasive strategies employed by Atticus in his closing argument, including ethos, pathos, logos, and linguistic devices. Delve into the intricacies of sender-receiver relationship, message content, emotional appeals, logical reasoning, and language choices.


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  1. SMELL STRATEGY FOR ARGUMENT ANALYSIS TAKING A LOOK AT ATTICUS CLOSING ARGUMENT

  2. S=SENDER/RECEIVER RELATIONSHIP: TABLES 1 AND 6 Ethos Who is the speaker/writer? Who is the target audience? What does the speaker/writer do to create a rapport/relationship with the audience? What evidence suggests that the speaker/writer knows his/her audience?

  3. M=MESSAGE: TABLES 2 AND 7 Overall main idea Summarize important points or statements What important idea does the speaker/writer want to leave with their audience?

  4. E=EMOTIONAL STRATEGIES: TABLES 3 AND 8 Pathos What feelings does the speaker/writer want to elicit from the audience? Diction/imagery with emotional charge Supports ethos Audience can relate

  5. L=LOGICAL STRATEGIES: TABLE 4 Logos How does the speaker/writer use logic? Facts/numbers/statistics/evidence that can be proven

  6. L=LANGUAGE: TABLE 5 Specific words (diction) and phrases Literary devices/figurative language Imagery How does this impact the message?

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