Class 15: WED OCT 23

Image

1. Use the time of a total stranger in such a way that he or she will not feel the time was wasted.⁣ ⁣
2. Give the reader at least one character he or she can root for.⁣ ⁣
3. Every character should want something, even if it is only a glass of water.⁣ ⁣
4. Every sentence must do one of two things—reveal character or advance the action.⁣ ⁣
5. Start as close to the end as possible.⁣ ⁣
6. Be a sadist. No matter how sweet and innocent your leading characters, make awful things happen to them—in order that the reader may see what they are made of.⁣ ⁣
7. Write to please just one person. If you open a window and make love to the world, so to speak, your story will get pneumonia.⁣ ⁣
8. Give your readers as much information as possible as soon as possible. To hell with suspense. Readers should have such complete understanding of what is going on, where and why, that they could finish the story themselves, should cockroaches eat the last few pages.⁣

The Visual Rhetoric Unit

A Portfolio Assignment

cropped-bushobamamorphheader2

The Visual Rhetoric Rewrite

  • So far, we’re just a few items into your Portfolio collection.
  • You’ve produced a Proposal+5 which will evolve into your Annotated Bibliography (That’s one Portfolio item).
  • You’ve also produced a Definition/Categorical argument AND your Definition Rewrite, both of which could end up in your Portfolio.
  • That said, you may be feeling rushed to produce arguments about your developing Thesis while you’re still gathering and examining sources.
  • I’d like to give you a bit more time to work on those aspects of your research before you produce your Causal and your Rebuttal arguments.
  • So . . .
  • Let’s take a little detour and concentrate for a week or two on the Visual Rhetoric assignment, which will ALSO become part of your Portfolio.
  • You’ll place your work directly into what we’ll call the Visual Rewrite.
  • Unlike the Definition and the Definition Rewrite posts, you’ll have just one post for your Visual Rhetoric Unit.

WARMUP: Analysis of a Static Image

  • To get warmed up to the idea of Visual Analysis, let’s start with a static image before moving on to motion pictures.
  • Visual Rhetoric, Static Image

Visual Analysis of One Second of Video


Professor’s Model Analysis

0:01. The ad starts very abruptly in the middle of a scene. What’s more, in the first second, the camera is zooming quickly back so that we have to adjust immediately to a barrage of information. The suggestion the filmmakers are making is that the footage was captured by an amateur camera operator, either for home video or maybe a low-budget documentary. Either way, we are given the impression that the footage is “real,” not staged by a director with hired actors.

The image quality too is low. It’s color photography, but the color is so washed-out we get the further impression of a low-budget production. It’s almost black-and-white.

We are behind the counter of a diner. We can tell this from the “marble” countertop before us and the ketchup bottles and napkin holders on the shelf below it. Attached to the countertop is a familiar menu-holder empty of menus. Even closer to the camera (which suggests the footage was taken from the kitchen, through the service window) is a red-top bottle of Angustora bitters. Another can be seen on the counter where customers could access it, alongside the ketchup bottle and the sugar server. The only common use for bitters is as a cocktail flavor. The implication is that this is a diner where drinks are served; therefore, we have at least the implication that some diners might be drinking.

Facing us at the counter are two young boys (one black, one white) dressed in similar sport jerseys. They are probably teammates. Next to the white boy is a crew-cut man in his 30s with longish sideburns. If he were heavier, he would resemble Kevin James from “King of Queens.” The implication is that he is a robust, perhaps a bit rough-edged, working-class guy here with his team, perhaps their coach, maybe father to one of the kids. He wears a lanyard around his neck; perhaps a whistle hangs from it, and a warmup jacket: coachwear.

On the counter between him and the white boy is a fielder’s glove. They are a baseball team. The kid is not a catcher.

Behind the three at the counter, a man and a woman occupy opposite sides of a booth. They are engaged in conversation. The man resembles Joe Pesci from “Goodfellas,” advancing the impression that we’re in a working-class diner. The bowling pin behind him, part of the decor of the place, further confirms this. The lone framed artwork decorating the space is a black-and-white photo of an urban street scene. Coffee cups are stacked upside-down in the service area behind the woman, whose hand motion before her face indicates she is the one doing the talking.

They have been served. The man is pointing at something large on the white boy’s plate. In fact, he points at it repeatedly and says something about it to the boy. Most likely he is picking up the tab. Maybe he doesn’t want that big dish wasted.

From a filmmaker’s point of view, the composition of the figures is very important. The characters are arranged in a line. Black boy at counter, Joe Pesci facing Meg Ryan in booth, White Boy at counter, Meg Ryan in Booth facing Joe Pesci, Coach Kevin James gesturing with his hand toward White Boy’s plate. His active hand gesture draws our attention. When he stops moving, Meg Ryan starts moving her hand in the very same space, keeping our attention on that spot, but shifting our focus to the conversation she’s having with the Joe Pesci. In one second, we have information about two different conversations. Both are clearly important.

End of the first second.

Visual Analysis of a Complete Argument

  • A Sample Analysis: Thai Life Insurance
    • Here we examine just 10 seconds of a 2-minute long-form commercial produced by the Thai Life Insurance company to promote the universal human good of doing small selfless gestures for others. How in the world is that supposed to sell life insurance?

How Much (What Kind of) Detail?

  • You won’t need this yet, but when you’re ready to revise your Visual Rhetoric argument, you may benefit from reviewing feedback I have offered to students in earlier semesters.
  • Link to Revision Advice for Visual Rhetoric

Task

58 Responses to Class 15: WED OCT 23

  1. ChefRat's avatar ChefRat says:

    Class Notes 10.23.24

    • Make a strong promise that you will follow up on, to your readers.
    • almost try to overwhelm the reader with information, you might fall short but you will however reach your goal of delivering enough content that they have enough to imagine their own ending, if neeeded!
    • if you have trouble organizing your first paragraph, or any in general. You should try to combine the topic into one or as few sentences as possible and start from there.
    • if the claim made from the visual rhetoric isn’t strong enough for the reader to immediately encapsulate, the reader will come to their own culmination.
    • we go second by second through the video, showing how our judgements of the video (setting, emotion, etc) are made immediately.
    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      if you have trouble organizing your first paragraph, or any in general. You should try to combine the topic into one or as few sentences as possible and start from there.

      I think what this mean is that you should summarize your paragraph into a sentence and then START with that sentence.

      2/3

  2. yardie's avatar yardie says:

    Class Notes 10/23/2024

    The visual rhetoric assignment- You can make someone view an image differently based on how you caption it. 

    Ad council “Now”

    • Say what you’ve seen, Before you say what you know.
    • Describe the visual well enough so the readers don’t have to watch the video to understand.

    Hypothesis – Summarize your intro paragraph to one sentence. Expand it only so far to develop your ideas in that sentence.

    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      Hypothesis – Summarize your intro paragraph to one sentence. Expand it only so far to develop your ideas in that sentence.

      That’s pretty good advice for most paragraphs that seem to wander off topic. If they can be summarized, the summary is the main idea. Be sure to express that idea in one sentence, perhaps at the top of the paragraph.

      3/3

  3. unicorn45678's avatar unicorn45678 says:

    Notes 10/23

    *Helpful tips 

    • Summarize your paragraphs into one sentence so that it can help you stay focus on one topic while writing your paragraph
    • The job for the introduction is to introduce your topic, not to explain what you’re writing about in your whole essay
    • Make sure to always give your readers as much information as possible, this will help the reader understand what’s going on in your essay

     Analysis of a static image 

    • As I watched the video that was played in class, we started to analysis the setting of the video.
    • We discussed that they’re setting is in a diner that also has a blowing alley
    • When you are asked in a visual argument from a film you have to describe what you saw to the reader that didn’t watch the film
    • The reader is not watching the video with you, so you can’t just give out information that you think will help the reader understand, you have to include all the details from the film in order for the reader to understand.
  4. Class notes – figure8clementine

    10/23/24

    • transitions between points in definition argument are crucial in not only understanding what’s written, but keeping hold of the readers attention span.
    • every paragraph has a topic sentence, which should be at the beginning of that paragraph
    • watching one of the short “ad council” videos, we can make inferences based off of the environment we see immediately and also judging by each person. We can tell that this is an Italian diner, and can tell that this is a coach taking some kids he coaches to lunch after what looks like a loss (judging by the one kid’s face).
    • we use our intuition and ability to assume things to understand situations faster and piece things together in a way that makes sense to us.
  5. GamersPet's avatar GamersPet says:

    The way click baits work is that it’s a way to grab your readers attention, but it’ll only last for a quick second if the introduction doesn’t absolutely capture their undivided attention.

    Advice from looking and analyzing examples of other classmates definition/argument is that to produce a thesis sentence is to summarized that paragraph into one whole sentence.

    Given an assignment that is not relate to our research paper to take a step back, and come back to it later is a static image assignment. The assignment is to watch a thirty second video with no audio, and then analysis, and interpret what’s the significant of the video and why. Got to be well descriptive of what’s going on, and why.

    How can the writers use the material to demonstrate their argument? It’s by knowing and understanding how effective the material can be used in a topic. Images are flexible based on how ones interpreted.

  6. phoenixxxx23's avatar phoenixxxx23 says:

    Class Notes- phoenixxxx23

    -Our attention budget is getting smaller and smaller

    -Start as close to the end as possible

    -We want readers to feel confident in the author’s transitions

    -Summarize your paragraph in one sentence -> develop this topic

    -You can’t risk loosing readers because of your introduction paragraph

    -Images are plastic and flexible, you can put any meaning inside them

    -Provide background!

  7. lobsterman's avatar lobsterman says:

    Class Notes 10/23

    Start closer to your goal when writing, this will be easier to get your point across and leave out the unnecessary.

    Kurt Vonnegut once said: Write to one person, that being your ideal reader. The reader should have such a complete understanding of what is going on that they could finish the the story if cockroaches ate the last pages.

    Went over visual rhetoric argument assignment and how to anaylyze short videos in detail.

    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      Start closer to your goal when writing, this will be easier to get your point across and leave out the unnecessary.

      For example, if AI is dangerous, is it because knowledge is bad or because knowledge has always been misused to control the electorate until they can be fully disenfranchised?

      3/3

  8. taco491's avatar taco491 says:

    Class Notes: 10/23/24

    -Quote: The closer we start near the goal, the closer we get the reader to the goal of our argument.

    -If we can’t figure out why our thesis is important, then it is not. This refers back to that we are not glued to our original argument.

    -Narrow our focus of our writing to a certain reader

    -Making our writing suspenseful is no use, give our readers all the information we have as soon as possible. Giving suspense just wastes our word count and makes us write blah blah blah.

    -When books were first made, margins were made very wide because of mice eating the pages. Personally, this is just funny that people took into account that there are so many mice eating their books, so their solution was to waste more paper in order for the mice to eat it without hurting their work.

    -The Visual Rhetoric Unit has nothing to do with our thesis/our argument, but is still a very important portfolio assignment that is due November 14th. The unit is just another literacy that will be useful for us to learn and understand.

    -We will be doing a 30 second deep analysis of a visual; everything we include/ we see is important and deliberate.

    -Do not have our readers wonder where we are going in our text. If there is no connection after 2-3 sentences, our readers are definitely going to be confused just like we were when reading the American Obesity writing. The best approach to fixing something like this is summarizing the paragraph into a sentence and then expanding as far as you need to, to get our point across.

    -If we can’t summarize our idea in a sentence or two, our writing will be all over the place trying to find the main idea to bring together all of our previous sentences.

    -When analyzing a visual argument from a film or video, we should describe what is happening in the video like we are telling a person who is blind what’s going on. This way we can describe the video well enough so that they do not have to watch it.

  9. imaginary.persona's avatar imaginary.persona says:

    10/23/24

    What Happened:

    Quote by David Mamet that my favorite professor just likes

    List of things that must be done when writing

    Why book margins were so big

    • Mice would eat book

    The Visual Rhetoric Unit

    Portfolio Assignment

    President Transition from one into another

    What I Got:

    Claims should have motivation in them

    Try to summarize a paragraph into one sentence

    Combing resources for materials that is useful to you

    What I still have Questions About:

  10. loverofcatsandmatcha's avatar loverofcatsandmatcha says:

    10/23

    Quote of the Day & Writing Tips

    • The journey out is the first draft, the journey back is the refined piece at the end.
    • On the return, you should have successfully gained the attention of your reader and made a cohesive point aka the goal
    • Tell the story as quickly and concisely as possible
      • Use the tips from the top of the agenda in order to achieve this
        • “Give the reader a character” does not apply to our non-fiction writing, but even so, give the reader something to care about
        • Every sentence should have purpose. If they don’t scrap them, or GIVE them intent. 
        • “Start as close to the end as possible” because we only have 3000 words, so don’t ramble and provide excessive background
        • Write for your ideal reader; ignore everyone else
        • As much info ASAP

    Visual Rhetoric and Analysis

    • Every frame is intentional
    • When looking for source material, sometimes you can tell exactly what the author meant, but not always. You don’t have to agree or see it from their side. You are not bound by the original author to use the source material in the same way; your purpose is your purpose
    • Focus on visuals, ignore sound, and interpret what the creator was attempting to convey without the audio, and if it is a strong argument or if it is lackluster
    • Material is just material; how you deploy it is dependent on the message you want to convey

    The Obesity Epidemic…

    • The paragraph was all over the place, and the thesis was buried beneath nearly 6 sentences of fluff being masked as “background”
    • Most people will quit reading earlier than when the thesis actually shows up
    • Biggest flaw: doesn’t start as close to the finish line as possible. Be concise and get to the point
    • Summarize your argument in a sentence, turn each sentence into a paragraph, and use this format as your default

    Ad Council

    • In one split second, there is so much information. Take note of every frame
    • The cast chosen, the setting, and every other aspect happens for a reason in these ad videos
    • without audio, your brain makes the inference of what is going on
    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      I knew these Notes would be special as soon as I read this:

      • The journey out is the first draft, the journey back is the refined piece at the end.
      • On the return, you should have successfully gained the attention of your reader and made a cohesive point aka the goal

      Not sure I could have explained the point of that quote any better.

      5/3

  11. Mongoose449's avatar Mongoose! says:

    Mongoose Notes – 10/23/2024

    • The first paragraph is key, as you must get the reader from the topic of nothing, to the idea you are arguing.
    • Starting as close to the end as possible is key, it lets you know where the end is and now you only need to find the means in which you reach that end.
    • Give information as soon as possible, understanding is key to get the point across.
    • Visual Rhetoric – The message to be accurate enough to visualize without even seeing the image. It provides a message that tries to suggest to you about something. Every single part has a reason to be there.
    • All choices are a medium to communicate the idea, sound, images, editing, design, layout, etc.
    • Make sure the important idea is there. Expand off a main idea/sentence to develop the components of it, rather than the means to get to that point.
    • Wandering to that idea is just delaying how to reach that idea, instead of anchoring the writing to the established idea.
    • Be able to summarize each paragraph into one sentence, and that your argument should be clear from reading JUST those sentences.
    • Each paragraph that is not able to get the topic across only results in one extra paragraph to read.
    • One sentence summary. You will never get lost, and that if you only read the first sentence you still get that point across.

    Visual Rhetoric

    • Describe a 30 second ad second by second. Describe it by not listening to the audio and attempting to describe both what you see and what you are understanding from the visuals only.
    • You may find something totally outlandish, but what you find is based only on visuals.
    • The point may be a message or selling a product.
  12. student1512's avatar student1512 says:

    10/23/24

    NOTES

    Quote:

    • First word eliminates a bunch, second word eliminates much more
    • By the time you’re a paragraph in, narrow readers focus substantially
    • This is exactly what its about
    • We have a smaller attention span

    Writer

    • Keep fun fast moving
    • Time isnt wasted
    • If you don’t know why your thesis is important than its not
    • A character you can root for!
    • Characters need to have wants
    • Sentence much reveal character, or reveal action
    • Start as close to the end as possible
    • Make bad things happen to your characters
    • Write to your ideal reader
    • As much info as possible as soon as possible

    The Visual Rhetoric Unity

    • Portfolio- proposal +5 (Ano Bibliography), Definition Argument/rewrite, Casual and rewrite, Rebuttal/ and rewrite, Reflective Statement, The Visual Rhetoric/ and rewrite
    • Visual Literacy/rhetoric 
    • Tease out what part of an argument of 30 second video
    • Selects one and analyze the hell out of it
    • Second at a time, describe visually
    • And explain why
    • Everything happens f0r a reason
    • Make your own purpose from what you’re given

    Core Value

    • Close and critical reading/analysis
    • Arriving at thoughtful understanding
    • Deciding for yourself whether the author accomplishes the persuasive goal set upon herself
    • Typography, layout, design, images, editing. (NOT SOUND)
    • One aspect: the visual (not auditory) 
    • Interpret why the things we were seeing are happening? What’s the argument?
    • Meaning is what we make it, how we deploy ends on what message we have to convey.

    Paragraph

    • Summarize if you’re unsure if your paragraph is explaining what you need
    • If it’s two or more sentences summarize then its two or more paragraphs 
    • Not a bad idea to make those summaries the first sentence

    Video

    • Make readers understand you conclusions
    • Use evidence and nuance
    • Visuals should be enough, if you need audio there is a critique to be made. 
    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      I don’t quite remember saying this, but I am suddenly passionate about the formula: 1st word narrows the universe, 2nd world reduces it to, say, a galaxy, 3rd world places us in our solar system, 4th word puts us on earth, 5th word locates us in time, 6 words in we should know what’s crucial about your thesis to humanity, now. Thank you.

      5/3

  13. chaoslol's avatar chaoslol says:

    Class Notes 10.23.24

    • Giving readers the most information possible allows them to have a clear understanding of the topic, and makes it easier to get your point across
    • Images alone have no meaning until one decides it, it’s very much up to interpretation as well as whatever the author decided the context of an image is
    • Each paragraph should be able to be summarized in one sentence, if that happens then the argument is strong.
    • Deep diving into a video second by second is difficult for me. I realized I don’t really pay attention to every little detail to come up with a summary of what is going on in a video; something I’ll work on.
    • Determining whether the audio is needed or not determines how effectively the video portrayed the main idea it was aiming to make.
    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      I liked your Notes until I saw this:

      Deep diving into a video second by second is difficult for me. I realized I don’t really pay attention to every little detail to come up with a summary of what is going on in a video; something I’ll work on.

      Then I loved them. And thank you. And you’re welcome.

      4/3

  14. student12121's avatar student12121 says:

    Class 10/23/24

    By the time one paragraph is written your readers focus should be very narrow. Write to only the ideal reader and narrow that readers focus immediately.

    Everything has a purpose. Make sure every word in your essay has a purpose. No word should be wasted.

    Focus on one thing with the restriction of all others helps deepen the readers understanding and can help them notice things they otherwise would not have noticed.

    Looking at the video in depth shows that we take in everything even if we don’t realize it. We are constantly making assumptions and analyzing things subconsciously which lead to larger, conscious assumptions.

  15. pinkduck's avatar pinkduck says:

    Class Notes 10/23

    • “Use the time of a total stranger in such a way that he or she will not feel the time was wasted.”
    • Do no waste your time writing things that aren’t even needed in order to prove/write about your claim.
    • “Give your readers as much as information as possible as soon as possible.”
    • “Suspense is overrated,” get to the point.
    • Your reader will become uninterested if you do not get to the point quick enough, attention span is short.
    • “Just because you both use the same material doesn’t mean you have to use it the same way.”
    • Instead of just reading texts we pay attention to all other types of communication used.
    • We’re focused on one aspect, the visual.
    • We do our best to interpret the visual and why it’s happening.
    • Focus on the important detail(s).
    • If there is no context in an image, it can mean anything we choose for it to mean.
    • The more time you spend reading the less time you pay closer attention to the things being said.
    • If your reader is likely to wander in your writing you may want to fix this. You want to hold their attention not the opposite.
    • Structure your analysis as a timeline with details.
    • Tell the professor what you’re seeing that way he can see it too.
    • It’s not only what you see but also WHY the director chose to show us the images.
    • The rewrite will become part of your portfolio.
    • Ad Council “Now” Video – They’re in a diner, the coach is taking three of his players, one being his son out to eat after losing a game.
    • Ad Council “Now” Video – Personally the audio wasn’t needed to understand the purpose of the video but it did add onto it.
    • While we don’t like to admit it, our brain automatically puts the pieces together to form an assumption on an image without context.
    • Unsung hero – The product is life insurance, it sells it by showing what happens when periodic contributions occur. The payoff in the end is substantial.
    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      I could quote several of your Notes for special appreciation. I choose this one:

      While we don’t like to admit it, our brain automatically puts the pieces together to form an assumption on an image without context . . . .

      . . . and then our brain PROVIDES the context.

      4/3

  16. Burnbook04's avatar Burnbook04 says:

    Notes 9/23/24

    • A portfolio assignment: gradually go from one guy into another ( Obama) expecting better or equivalent to the first.
    • if you can’t purposefully summarize your idea into a sentence of a few words your writing will drag out. write your one sentence summary ( readers will only read the first sentence)
    • Video: Dinner in Jersey bowling alley. being observant you can see the setting, people, and location. talking to kid about baseball ( baseball mitt on the table) most likely coach taking the team out to dinner. Drawing focus on two people in the back ( people in the front focus on their plates and don’t do anything which causes us to look in the back) = with audio the video was actually about domestic violence and it showed that the man in the back was actually beating is wife.
    • Life insurance video: the long game doesn’t gain anything in the start then receives a win at the end
  17. pineapple488's avatar pineapple488 says:

    Class notes:

    • After about a paragraph, your reader should know exactly what your essay is about because people have short attention spans.
    • If your thesis is not important to you, it will not be important to anyone else either.
    • Give people an opportunity to hope for the best for humanity.
    • Start as close to the end as possible, give them all the information as soon as you can. (no suspense)
    • Write with your ideal reader in mind.
    • The visual rhetoric portfolio assignment: Provide enough description of every second of the video so that one can visualize the video from your description alone. You must determine the writer’s argument based on the visuals alone and analyze the choices they made to portray this argument.
    • Every decision made in a video is purposeful and intended for a reason such as to elicit a response.
    • To use a source, you are not bound by the opinions of the original author. You can interpret the material and use it in your argument however you wish.
    • Material is just material, but it can be used in different ways depending on the message you wish to convey.
    • You should be able to summarize a paragraph into a single sentence that portrays the entire main idea. It may help to start each paragraph with these sentences.
    • You want to be as direct as possible to keep a reader’s attention.
    • Certain pieces of the image attract your attention and lead you to draw conclusions.
    • Everything is done with intention, perhaps in many takes to get the perfect shot that draws your attention to a certain point.
    • If you can’t describe the message without listening to it, than the visuals didn’t do enough and the video was too dependent on the audio.
  18. Robofrog's avatar Robofrog says:

    Class notes 10/23:

    Quote: spend one paragraph going from this could be about anything at all to about something very specific, use one sentence summary to start then build upon it

    The Visual Rhetoric Unit: morality plays, makes powerful argument to audience, use time stamps and description must be accurate enough to understand what is going on without actually looking at source, everything in the scene has meaning and a purpose, watch without sound

    WARMUP: Analysis of a Static Image: The clear ones are useful, the vague ones are not, same material different meanings

    Professor’s Model Analysis: Sections-describe visuals, why they are there, after analysis of effectiveness, does it match up with the sound

    Visual Analysis of a Complete Argument: bars shown throughout the video, product being sold is life insurance for future happiness

    Assignments:

    Portfolio Assignment Visual Rhetoric OCT 29

    Portfolio Assignment Visual Rhetoric rewrite NOV 14

    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      These are mostly opaque to me, but nobody else mentioned this:

      The Visual Rhetoric Unit: morality plays, makes powerful argument to audience

      . . . which is very nice. So:

      4/3

  19. Andarnaurram's avatar Andarnaurram says:

    Class Notes 10/23

    -We must know why our thesis is important or we are not passionate to our original argument

    -Reader often skim over the reading so we must narrow our readers focus

    -thesis statement summarizes the paragraph

    -We can get our readers to come to a conclusion by evidence with directly stating it

    -A reader must be able to describe the seen without listening to it and if they can’t then their is not a good enough visual description

  20. Who'sOnFirst?'s avatar Who'sOnFirst? says:

    10/23

    • Don’t keep the reader in suspense.
    • Start as late in your story as possible.
    • Material is just material in your hands, how it is interpreted is up to you.
    • Rather than replying to these statements I am doing my own. The statement I would choose to use with this photo sequence is “The lesser of two evils is still evil”
    • Looking at a video frame by frame helps break down exactly all the elements that point us towards a conclusion.
  21. Bagel&Coffee's avatar Bagel&Coffee says:

    Today we marched to a different beat, a change in rhythm from the usual topics about our thesis. Mostly.

    The one exception was when we looked at material a student wrote for their definitional argument. Specifically, this student wrote about obesity, err-I mean, people who are exploiting others with misinformation about nutrition. I joke with my correction of what the student was writing about, because it gets to the heart of the lesson: we must be clear and concise about what our argument is. What we read, didn’t exactly cascade smoothly from one topic to the next. It instead read more like a lot of setup, or like list of topics that would be covered in the paper. A little bit of set up is not exactly a bad thing, however a summary of all the topics that will be covered is not what the first paragraph should be. Our first paragraph is to let loose the hounds of war and let our accusation fly. The rest of the paper we can lawyer together information we want people to see that supports our position.

    The rest of the class was more distant from thesis stuff.

    We talked about David Mamet’s advice. There isn’t much to comment about it. It is solid advice. It was what he found success in. Should we try to follow his advice? Yea, sure. I would summarize his advice in my own words as don’t be an erotic dancer with your writing. A stripper will tease and waste time and every time you think something is going to happen, nothing happens! Then like a slot machine, they ask if you want to pay more money for another go. Forget all that and get to the point! Give your audience the information it needs to understand the setting, the characters, and what is at stake for them. Then let the troubles out of pandoras box for the characters and give clear direction of where things are going. Get to the climax and make it a satisfying payoff so your audience doesn’t feel like they wasted time.

    The real meat and potatoes of our class was about the meaning of images. We looked at an image of George W. Bush and Barack Obama at either ends of a spectrum, with several processed images that depicted strange interpretations of trying to fuse Bush and Obama’s face together. We were asked if this had meaning. If there was a meaning from the original creator of the image, it is not apparent. It appeared to me to more likely be a test of an AI’s ability to fuse images together. If we wanted to, the professor pointed out, we could put text to it and give it a meaning that we wanted. Man, did I want to call out “Like a meme?!”. Memes are America’s pastime, and this is literally how memes work! You start with an image and then everyone takes turns putting their own spin on it with text (or minor alterations to the image like putting a company symbol where someone’s face should be) to make if funny or make a statement.

    We took a look at a YouTube video from the ad council about teaching boys to not hit girls, but without sound. It felt more like a lesson in cinematography than anything else: framing, camera movement, show-don’t-tell, and other concepts in the art of video making. Not sure what the takeaway was. I guess the takeaway was that people use filmmaking techniques to try to maximize the effect they want. We observed “shaky cam” (which has earned the ire of many film critics for being overused since the 2000s). We observed framing the person you want the audience to focus on by using color, objects, or just a zoom in. We observed show-don’t-tell, which showed us how the environment and costumes and character actions, tell us everything we need to know without the need for narrator or soliloquy.

    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      The Writing Arts Department has faced up to the reality that much/most information today is communicated using a combination of text and visuals, so . . . literacy doesn’t mean what it used to mean (it never means what it meant a generation ago). Isolating the visuals from the audio/textural/video presentation is my way of emphasizing “digital literacy” by compelling students to convert visual information into text with the clear implication that for either to be predictably effective, BOTH must be deliberate and emphatically clear.

      We know for sure the directors of the Ad Council videos made deliberate choices because they have the budget to get what they want. You should write as if you had thousands to spend on every second.

      5/3

  22. ChickenNugget's avatar ChickenNugget says:

    Class Notes – 10/23/24

    • Quote: Since our attention spans are becoming shorter and shorter as time goes on, it is important to start as close to your goal as possible while writing so that the reader does not feel that they are wasting their time and so that you are leaving out arbitrary details. Start as close to the end as possible, from the first paragraph be direct about what the next 1000 words are going to be about.
      • Write to just your ideal reader.
      • Give as much information as possible as soon as possible.
    • Visual Rhetoric: The media is just material that you can use as you wish to relay whichever message or claim you are trying to convey.
      • When watching a video without the sound, your brain makes decisions automatically about what is happening in the video.
      • You need to describe exactly what you are seeing before you explain what you know.
  23. iloveme5's avatar iloveme5 says:

    Class notes 10/23

    • “Since our attention spans are becoming shorter and shorter as time goes on, it is important to start as close to your goal as possible while writing so that the reader does not feel that they are wasting their time and so that you are leaving out arbitrary details. Start as close to the end as possible, from the first paragraph be direct about what the next 1000 words are going to be about.”- This quote to me means giving as much information possible in the beginning of your writing and not waiting until the end or middle to say your hypothesis. Your readers should automatically know what they are reading right away.
    • Write to your ideal reader. Makes me wonder am I writing to a specific person? A specific group? and what am I trying to prove to them.
    • I learned about the Importance an image has. Especially fi you are tying one to your writing/article. An image captures the readers attention. I automatically thought about magazines or celebrity articles and how the media specifically uses bad pictures or something similar so that people can read it.
    • Visual Rhetoric is basically explaining a message/ image so accurately that the person can picture it without seeing it.
    • The photo I choose will provide a specific message, exactly what I want my readers to see/know about my topic.
    • I saw the video of the life insurance policy a couple years ago but never analyzed it how I did in class. Everything had a purpose and was there for a reason.
    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      Write to your ideal reader. Makes me wonder am I writing to a specific person? A specific group? and what am I trying to prove to them.

      I love it when you tell my why and how class made a difference to you.

      4/3

  24. lil.sapph's avatar lil.sapph says:

    10/23

    •  Claims should have motivation, and start as close to the end as possible
    • Give readers what they need (enough information asap, something scary/threatening to grab on to, something worth their time). 
    • Visual rhetoric 
      •  Goes right into the rewrite, as a portfolio assignment. 
      • Image of trump-biden, kind of scary… but its about what it can mean
      • Any useful material, no matter how used, can be used in any way I want it to.
    • Paragraph on weight lossI think the paragraph was kind of trying to include too much information at the same time where it’s
      • not very smoothly pieced together either. 
      • It had a lot of good ideas just maybe too many all to close 
      • Similar to one of my ideas for the essay how societal and technological advancements are actually making us lazier physically and mentally. 
    • Visual assignment
      • Find video from ad council
      • identify everything I see
  25. KFury205's avatar KFury205 says:

    10/23

    The quote of the day comes from David Mamet, a American playwright, who said , “The journey out always seems longer than the journey back. It is new and demanding, requiring furious concentration as we look for signs, characteristics, and shortcuts. On the return, we are better able to separate the essential from the extraneous; our concentration has been narrowed to the goal.” This profound saying resonates particularly well with those of us who struggle with extensive essays, whether it’s 3,000 words or even 10,000. In the face of such challenges, Mamet’s words serve as a comforting reminder that while the initial stages of a project can feel overwhelming, the process becomes clearer and more focused as we progress.

    In our recent class discussion, we turned our attention to an upcoming assignment: a Visual Rhetorical unit. For this task, we will analyze a 30-second video, aiming to convey the perspective that the video intends to express. This involves a meticulous examination of every frame and second, allowing us to articulate how the visual elements contribute to the overall message. By dissecting the imagery and techniques used, we will gain insight into how the video is structured to engage its audience and convey its intended meaning.

    A crucial question arises: how can writers effectively use the material to support their arguments? The answer lies in understanding the flexibility of images and their interpretations. Each visual element can evoke different responses, and it is the writer’s responsibility to harness these interpretations to bolster their narrative. By thoughtfully analyzing the video’s content and context, we can demonstrate how each component works together to reinforce the overarching message, ultimately enhancing our ability to persuade and engage our readers.

  26. SkibidySigma's avatar SkibidySigma says:

    Class Notes 10/23

    • Start with a clear purpose and get to the main point quickly. Readers’ attention spans are short, so make every word count from the beginning.
    • The first paragraph should set up exactly what readers can expect. By the end of the first paragraph, readers should know where the paper is going and why it matters.
    • Summarize each paragraph in one sentence to keep it focused. This will help me spot paragraphs that might be covering too much or wandering off-topic.
    • Write for a specific reader to make the writing more effective. Think about who would appreciate or relate to the topic and keep them in mind.
    • Don’t waste words; every sentence should reveal something or move the story forward. Anything that doesn’t add to the main idea should be cut.
    • Avoid suspense—give readers essential info right away so they can follow. Don’t hold back key points or explanations; clarity is more important than suspense in academic writing.
    • For the visual rhetoric assignment, we’ll analyze a 30-second Ad Council video in detail, describing each second without sound. I’ll need to describe it so clearly that someone could picture it without watching.
    • Every detail in the video (casting, props, colors) is intentional and supports the argument. I’ll think about why certain choices were made and how they contribute to the message.
    • This analysis will go in my portfolio, along with my Annotated Bibliography, Definition Argument + Rewrite, Rebuttal, and Reflective Statement.
  27. Softball1321's avatar Softball1321 says:

    Class Notes – 10/23

    • Focus on visual rhetoric assignment that will also be in portfolio
    • Make sure to capitalize on the meaning of your thesis and why it is important
    • Provide information about your writing in the beginning of your assignment
    • Make sure to not get off track on writing, be very direct
    • Portfolio assignment due November 15
    • Use enough evidence in your writing so the readers can get a full understanding of what your thesis and reasonings are.
    • davidbdale's avatar davidbdale says:

      Not sure I know what you mean by either of these:

      • Make sure to capitalize on the meaning of your thesis and why it is important
      • Provide information about your writing in the beginning of your assignment

      2/3

  28. PRblog24's avatar PRblog24 says:

    Class Notes 21 October 2024

    • Illusions can change our perspective on what we believe things may be.
    • Attention spans are shortening….
      • The reader should only be reading information that is needed for the topic.
    • Set up conditions to insure your readers are seeing your point as you would like them to.
    • First draft is not worth anything, as there is always room for room for changes and improvements.

Leave a comment