Mark did not write to an audience sepecific In the gospels, Jesus Christ is presented from different perspectives.
1- Matthew starts with the family line of David which leads to Joseph (husband to Mary) therefore this gospel presents Jesus as his inherited title of King of Israel
2- Mark starts straight away with Jesus being baptized by John as the Anointed one (Christ) therefore this gospel presents Jesus as the Christ, the savior, the anointed one
3- Luke starts with the identification of Mary of the tribe of Levi, of the daughters of Aaron (priest line) therefore this gospel presents Jesus as his inherited title of High priest
4- John starts from "The Beginning" and therefore presents Jesus as the son of our Father who's existence transcends this second earth iteration both backward and forward. The book of Revelation has a very similar perspective, as it looks from "The Day of the Lord" both backward and forward.
The gospels are therefore different perspectives of Jesus
1- The King
2- The Anointed one
3- The High Priest
4- The everlasting
Mark primarily wrote to a Gentile audience especially a Roman audience. Mark is the Gospel of action and this would appeal to the practical, action-oriened Romans. Jesus is portrayed as the Servant who came to suffer for the sins of many.
a) Write for both your instructor and a general audience.
There are 165 pages of text in An Audience for Einstein by Mark Wakely.
Mark Wakely's An Audience for Einstein is a work of science fiction.
Rhoads, Dewey and Michie (Mark as Story) say that Mark's Gospel was designed to be performed orally by a narrator to an audience that would have, for the main part, been illiterate.
The intended audience varies depending on the book. Some authors write books for children, while other write for adults who are interested in technology.
So you can properly define terms that the audience may not know.
Mark wrote to encourage perscecuted Christians.
He wrote the second, the Gospel of Mark.
The German equivalent of Mark is Markus
95?
Mark wrote the 'Gospel according to Mark'.