The relationship between the speaker, the speaker's style of address, and the audience's expectations
The relationship between the speaker, the speaker's style of address, and the audience's expectations
The relationship between the speaker, the speaker's style of address, and the audience's expectations
CONTEXT
A rhetorical response.
the circumstances surrounding a rhetorical act
The relationship between the speaker, the speaker's style of address, and the audience's expectations
The relationship between the speaker, the speaker's style of address, and the audience's expectations
The rhetorical situation
The term "voice" can refer to the rhetorical stance of the poem (1st/2nd/3rd person, etc.).
CONTEXT
A rhetorical response.
the circumstances surrounding a rhetorical act
The art of persuasion in any medium
the five elements areAuthorAudiencePurposeTopicOccasion
A rhetorical situation is the context of a rhetorical act, made up (at a minimum) of a rhetor (a speaker or writer), an issue (or exigence), a medium (such as a speech or a written text), and an audience.
The rhetorical situation has five different elements that a writer must consider when planning and writing effective arguments. These elements are text, reader, author, constraints, and exigency. The reader should consider his/her place within the rhetorical situation as they read a work to better understand the work's argument.
The concept that a situation can be considered from several different, yet valid, points of view.