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Journalistic
Writing MCM310
VU
LECTURE
40
WRITING
ANALYSIS
An
opinion article focuses
primarily on the writer's use of evidence
and assumptions to support
his/her claim
or
argument. However, opinion
article will on occasion include a
discussion of the
hidden arguments and
the
inherent
contradictions in an
argument, if the reader finds
that those elements are
important to the argument
as
a whole. Often an article (or
analytical essay) has the
following "sections," not always in this
exact order,
though
this is a common order of
elements:
1.
a summary of the original pieces
an
abstract usually
is a common way to start (In
fact, it is
traditional
to write as if your reader is
unfamiliar with the original
work, even
if s/he is not,
because by
writing
the summary in such a fashion, your
reader gets a sense of how
you interpret the
arguments
you
are reading.)
·
purpose
What
is the author's reason for
writing?
What
is the author's main
idea?
·
scope
What
is the author's focus in this
piece?
Where
does the author concentrate
his/her attention?
·
method
What
kinds of evidence does the author
provide?
How
does the author try to convince the
reader of the validity of his/her
main idea?
·
results
What
are the consequences of the problem or
issue that the author is
discussing?
·
recommendations
What
solutions does the author present to the
reader to resolve the problem of
issue in the
piece?
Does
the author recommend action or change in
his/her piece?
·
conclusions
Does
the author describe a `cause
and effect' relationship or explain the origins of
this issue or
problem?
What
conclusions does the author
draw from his/her study of
the issue or problem?
2.
Your
claim (Your reaction/response
to the situation. You will support your
claim, your
interpretation
of
the different sides in the debate, by the
details of your analysis of the
assumptions and
evidence
used
in the argument.). There are three
types of claims:
Faucal
claims: those
that can be verified through
experimentation, observation, or reason. For
example:
·
The
current temperature is above 0°
Fahrenheit.
·
Sunshine
is warm.
·
My
car's battery must be dead
since the car will not
start and the lights and
horn do not work
either.
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Journalistic
Writing MCM310
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·
My
car's battery must be alright
even though the car won't
start; the lights and the horn
still work.
Value
claims: those
that express a writer's value
system -- what the writer believes is
good or bad, right
or
wrong. For example:
·
Democracy
offers the greatest chance for people to
realize their full
potential.
·
The
State of Illinois building in
downtown Chicago -- sometimes referred to
as "Spaceship Illinois"
--
is an aesthetic failure.
Policy
claims: those
that seek to change people's
attitudes and behaviours
toward a particular issue.
For
example:
1.
We ought to register and
license guns the same way we
do automobiles.
2.
Drivers under the age of 25 with
even the slightest amount of alcohol in
their blood should have
their
licenses
revoked for 5 years.
3.
An
analysis of assumptions
(You describe and evaluate
the warranted and the unwarranted, the
explicit
and
the implicit assumptions.)
4.
An analysis of hidden arguments
(You describe how the
assumptions create another implied
argument,
the
hidden argument.)
5.
An analysis of inherent contradictions
(If the original authors
make statements that contradict
your
experience
of the world or your ideas, explain
those differences.)
6.
An analysis of intended audience (See the
paragraph below on this
page.)
7.
An analysis of evidence
rational
appeal
emotional
appeal
ethical
appeal
Evidence
Rational
appeal
Emotional
appeal
Ethical
appeal
facts
trustworthiness
·
the
higher emotions
case
studies
credibility
altruism
statistics
expert
testimony
love
reliable
sources
experiments
...
logical
reasoning
fairness
·
the
base emotions
analogies
greed
anecdotes
lust
...
Logical
Fallacies: The following logical fallacies
are seen common in articles.
Remember, logical
fallacies
are ways of arguing that are
illogical and meaningless
1.
APPEAL
TO AUTHORITY
·
EXAMPLE:
My teacher says she's voting for
the conservative candidate, so I
will too.
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Journalistic
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2.
APPEAL
TO EMOTION
·
EXAMPLE:
I'm sure someone with your vast
experience can see that plan B is
better. (Appeal to
flattery)
3.
APPEAL
TO IGNORANCE
·
EXAMPLE:
I've never seen an alien, so they must
not exist.
4.
APPEAL
TO POPULAR OPINION
·
EXAMPLE:
Everyone cheats on their income taxes, so
it must be all right.
5.
COMPOSITION
·
EXAMPLE:
All the parts of the engine were
lightweight, so the engine
should have been lightweight.
6.
CORRELATION
IMPLIES CAUSATION
·
EXAMPLE:
There was a full moon the night I had my
car accident, so I'm never driving
again under a full
moon.
7.
FALSE
CAUSE AND EFFECT
·
EXAMPLE:
Yesterday I ate tuna sandwich
and then failed my test.
I'm never eating tuna
sandwich before a
test
again.
8.
HASTY
GENERALIZATIONS
·
EXAMPLE:
I liked the last Chinese
restaurant I went to, so I
will like every Chinese
restaurant in the world.
Source:
Kies,
Daniel, Department of English, College of
DuPage
161
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