In the excerpt, Jackson employs a hasty generalization by suggesting that all Native Americans are uniformly opposed to removal without acknowledging the complexities and varying perspectives within Indigenous communities. He simplifies the issue, implying that their resistance is solely due to a desire to maintain their territory, ignoring factors such as individual tribes' differing interests or the potential for some tribes to agree to relocation. This oversimplification misrepresents the nuanced realities of Native American responses to removal policies.
it focuses on the wheelbarrow as a single specific image
It was researched and incorporates data and statistics to hold the audience's attention.
Formal Diction (apex)
Give the excerpt and you might get an answer.
You have not produced any excerpt.
The fallacy identified in the excerpt about Sam the surfer is the hasty generalization fallacy. This fallacy occurs when a conclusion is drawn from insufficient evidence, in this case assuming all surfers are careless based on one individual's behavior.
Please rewrite. This is clearly a school assignment. We don't have the choice of a excerpt from your assignment.
To provide an accurate response, I would need the specific excerpt you're referring to. Could you please share the excerpt or provide additional context?
Ethos and Logos
A god intervening in human affairs
loss of still more precious lives
Nature is ultimately more powerful than humans
Go forth young person.
The excerpt from "Gilgamesh: A New English Version" most clearly showcases the characteristic of grandeur found in epic poetry, as it portrays larger-than-life events and heroes in a majestic and impressive style typical of the genre.
He concludes that american Indians hold the same views as whites about settling in a new land.
form of the poem crossing the bar
parallelism - apex