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Pages:
1 page/≈275 words
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Style:
MLA
Subject:
Literature & Language
Type:
Essay
Language:
English (U.S.)
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MS Word
Date:
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Topic:

Unspeakable Conversations and There is no Shame Worse than Poor Teeth in a Rich World Literature Essay

Essay Instructions:

According to my documentation requirements, use simple words

 

Consider the work you’ve done in 1.1 and 1.2. Consider which patterns of rhetoric are worth focusing on in a rhetorical analysis and why. Which of that essay’s author’s rhetorical choices reveal their deeper philosophies, assumptions, judgments philosophies, values, worldviews, prejudices, cultural norms, etc.?

  1. Jot down a quick list of points of comparison you notice between these two essays. Maybe five or more. Remember that you’re looking for ways to compare their rhetoric, but also the ways in which specific rhetorical choices reveal something deeper about how they understand what they’re writing about. See “Difference within Similarity (or similarity despite difference)” WA 110-111.
  2. Pick the two points of comparison you think are the most useful to examine. For each one, write down key quotations, paraphrases, and descriptions from both essays (your evidence) and what we might better understand by looking at them (your claims/analysis).
  3. Write a final couple of paragraphs that try to make sense of each of the patterns you’ve noticed. What can you see by reading these two essays together that you could not see by reading them separately?

https://aeon(dot)co/essays/there-is-no-shame-worse-than-poor-teeth-in-a-rich-world

 

https://www(dot)nytimes(dot)com/2003/02/16/magazine/unspeakable-conversations.html

 

Essay Sample Content Preview:
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Both “Unspeakable Conversations” and “There is no Shame Worse than Poor Teeth in a Rich World” are written to not only entertain the audience but to address some wrongs in the society. For the Unspeakable Conversation it addresses the discrimination of the individuals living with disabilities while Poor teeth talk of individual living in extreme poverty. Both authors are the main characters of the suffering and pain endured in the narrations, for Unspeakable Conversations Harriet Mcbyde Johnson has had cognitive impairment since birth and Sarah Smarsh has had bad teeth all her life. Rhetorically they both use ugly as how other people see them; for Unspeakable Conversations Johnson observes that he is not ugly, it is only that people do not know how to look at him: this statement means people think he is ugly. Poor Teeth uses Pennsatucky the Orange is the new Black actress to describe ugliness as she is vied as a monster because of her grey, jagged teeth.
Key points in both essays are that they refer to race and poverty as the main issues behind their perils and suffering. On poor teeth, the author claims that if one has a mouthful of teeth shaped by childhood in po...
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