ENG 170 Final Exam Terms and Definitions
Myths about American Childhood (5)
"A final myth, which is perhaps the most difficult to overcome, is a myth of progress, and its inverse, a myth of decline" (Mintz 2)
Myths about American Childhood (4)
"A fourth myth is that the United States is a peculiarly child-friendly society, when in actuality Americans are deeply ambivalent about children" (Mintz 2)
Myths about American Childhood (3)
"A third myth is that childhood is the same for all children, a status transcending class, ethnicity, and gender" (Mintz 2)
Myths about American Childhood (2)
"Another myth is that of the home as a haven and bastion of stability in an ever-changing world" (Mintz 2)
Myths about American Childhood (1)
"One is the myth of a carefree childhood" (Mintz 2)
DOI
Digital Object Identifier, used as a unique, permanent link to a text. A doi is considered more secure than a hyperlink and should be cited when available
MLA
Modern Language Association, documentation style for much of the humanities
The Giver
The story itself (i.e., you should have read it and be able to discuss it)
Summarize
a broad overview, often of an entire text or a large piece of text; requires the author's last name, or, if no author, the title of the work
Social Construct
a concept or definition that exists within a cultural because of human agreement rather than objectivity
Denotation
a dictionary-style definition of a word
Paraphrase
a passage, usually not longer than a paragraph, of someone else's ideas put into your own words; requires the author's last name, and, if available, the page number
Wicked Question
a question that doesn't have a single right answer, and one that's so complex that there are multiple different disciplinary approaches
Rogerian Argument
a structure that seeks to identify the problem, understand the audience, and ultimately build a proposal by seeking common ground between rhetorician and audience
Copia
abundance of style
Reference Work
an informational text that's meant to provide quick access for general information about a topic. Examples include dictionaries, encyclopedias, atlases, textbooks
Definitional Argument
analyzing what a term/concept means and its consequences
Slippery slope
arguing that a course of action will unleash uncontrollable destruction
Bandwagon Fallacy
assuming that because something is popular it is also good, true, and/or right
Ad Hominem
attacking the person instead of the argument
Subjective Description
based on personal perspective, feelings, and individual interpretation
Synthesis
bringing texts into conversation with each other; showing that you, as the writer, are mediating the conversation; they say/I say
Negative Definition
definition by negation, describing what something is not to emphasize its characteristics
Demographics
descriptions of audience characteristics
Audience Analysis
determining the audience's knowledge and attitude about a topic and their expectations of the rhetorician and the argument
Rhetoric
discerning the available means of persuasion in any given situation (Aristotle)
Post Hoc Ergo Propter Hoc
drawing conclusions about causes because one event follows another; also known as if this, then that
Appeal to Pity
emotional manipulation that is not relevant to the argument
Rhetorical Appeals
ethos (credibility, authorship, and authority), pathos (the values and emotions), and logos (the use of logic)
Objective Description
fact-based description
Works Cited
formal list of citations at the end of an essay
Utopia/Dystopia
ideal world/a world where everything has gone wrong; both imaginary
Parenthetical Citations
in-text citations that must match the first term of the Works Cited entry to which it refers
Plagiarism
intentionally or unintentionally misrepresenting work as your original ideas unique to that course
Enumeration
listing qualities to establish a definition
Appeal to Authority
over-relying on authority without logic or evidence; making arguments outside of the scope of one's authority
Stasis Theory
part of the rhetorical process of invention (brainstorming); four stages (facts, definition, evaluation, proposal) that are intended to move the audience through the argument and reach agreement
False Binary
providing an either/or solution when there are other possibilities; also known as black-and-white thinking or the false dichotomy
Hasty Generalization
reaching a broad conclusion based on a single example or insufficient evidence
Kenneth Burke's Parlor Metaphor
research as participating in an ongoing conversation
Neoteny
retaining juvenile characteristics into adulthood
Peer-Reviewed
scholarly work that is evaluated by professional colleagues, often "blindly" (i.e., without either party knowing the identity of the other), to maintain accuracy and rigor
Kairos
seizing the moment, the opportunity for an argument
Scope
setting the boundaries of an argument; establishing a disciplinary framework or lens
Straw Man Argument
setting up a weak argument that's easy to defeat without dealing with the issue's complexity
Exemplification
showing vs. telling, using examples to illustrate a point
Criteria
specific traits within the category of scope to further refine the argument
Banned Books
texts removed from library shelves or school curricula based on challenges (usually from patrons or parents); tracked by the American Library Association (ALA)
MLA vs. APA Format
the first is more author- and text-focused; the second is more focused on dates and currency
Rhetorician
the good [person] speaking well (Quintilian)
Connotation
the larger context around what a word means by considering what it signifies
Perspective/Point-of-View
the position from which a story is told; first-person narration uses "I," third-person limited uses a narrator who sees all the characters' actions; third-person omniscient uses a narrator who sees all the characters' actions and thoughts
Rhetorical Triangle
the relationship between the rhetorical appeals
Primary Source
the text that is being analyzed; the original research
Secondary Source
the texts about the original piece of work
Rhetorical Situation
thesis (the main argument), purpose (to inform, entertain, and/or persuade), audience (the intended receivers of the message), and exigency (why it matters, the urgency)
Popular, Professional/Trade, Scholarly
types of sources that are named based on the intended audience; moving from general to specific
Definition by Analogy
using "X is like" structure to show how two terms are related and how they might overlap
Red Herring
using a distraction to avert the conversation from the actual terms of the argument
Quote
using another author's words when you can't say it better yourself (it's significant, or pithy, or filled with technical language); requires the author's last name, and, if available, the page number
Sensory Detail
using description of the five senses (touch, hearing, sight, smell, taste) to engage the reader
Definition by Example
using exemplification to illustrate the meaning of a term/concept
Circular Reasoning
using the evidence as the grounds for the argument; an argument that reaches no conclusion