Communication Criticism: Rhetoric, Social Codes, Cultural StudiesWaveland Press, 2001 - 322 pagine This introduction to criticism teaches students critical skills, whether examining television, fiction, nonfiction, visual arts, or oral and written discourse. Three introductory chapters provide a foundation to explore nine approaches to critical study. The perspectives presented bridge disciplinary boundaries and include: asking questions about how audiences process communication, understanding human symbol systems and social relations as vehicles for comprehending the world, value and narrative analysis, and psychoanalytic and ideological criticism. The discussions of using each approach contain questions critics are most likely to ask, assumptions governing the approach, an exploration of sample analyses that reveal vocabulary most frequently used, and a review of the problems encountered by critics. |
Dall'interno del libro
Risultati 1-3 di 89
Pagina 92
... example , James Michener's Centennial builds its theme on large doses of detailed description of people and places , which helps to build probability for the theme . But even a shorter text , like a speech , can have density . Here is ...
... example , James Michener's Centennial builds its theme on large doses of detailed description of people and places , which helps to build probability for the theme . But even a shorter text , like a speech , can have density . Here is ...
Pagina 127
... Example : The rebuttal argument calls this tax " one of the largest tax increases on poor people . " 2. Will the viewer believe the argument is reasonable ? Example : Do they believe a media campaign will cause people to stop smoking ...
... Example : The rebuttal argument calls this tax " one of the largest tax increases on poor people . " 2. Will the viewer believe the argument is reasonable ? Example : Do they believe a media campaign will cause people to stop smoking ...
Pagina 138
... example in a different way as well . He notes that some- times a person reasons from one example directly to another , without going through the process of induction . Today we call that reasoning from parallel case : if something ...
... example in a different way as well . He notes that some- times a person reasons from one example directly to another , without going through the process of induction . Today we call that reasoning from parallel case : if something ...
Sommario
Communication Criticism Today | 3 |
The CriticalCultural View of Criticism | 16 |
Analyzing Texts | 23 |
Copyright | |
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Parole e frasi comuni
acceptable accurate interpretation action American analysis approach argued argument associated audience authority become behavior beliefs called central chapter character claim codes communication criticism complex constructed context culture defined developed discourse discussed dominant effect examine example experience fact follow force formal criticism groups human ideas identified ideological important individual institutions interested interpretation issues Journal judgment kinds knowledge language literary lives look matter meaning metaphor narrative natural noted objects particular performance person political President principles problem psychoanalytic questions readers reason relations relationships rhetorical role rules says sense significant signs situation social society specific speech standards statements story structure style symbolic talk television tell term theme theory things thought tion traditional truth turn understand United value system visual women writing