Tag Archives: audience

Blog post #5

In “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment” by Chris M. Anson, he points out that only applying the same practice of writing over and over can cause writers to become stuck in that standard style of writing. This habit makes … Continue reading

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“Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment”

In the reading “Habituated Practice Can Lead to Entrenchment” by Chris M. Anson’s main idea is how writers can become comfortable in a specific area of writing. Writers can repeat the same genres of writing if they are comfortable with … Continue reading

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Writing For an Audience

In Andrea Lunsford’s “Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences” talks about imagining your target audience. Lunsford says that times have changed and audiences may not be clear. Because of technology, we no longer have an audience right in front of … Continue reading

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Blog post #4

In Andrea Lunsford’s, “Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences,” she talks about the most important features of writing which includes a concept called the rhetorical triangle. On each point of this triangle there is a different ideology such as the … Continue reading

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Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences,

Writing is rational and responsive, these characteristics of writing are known as the rhetorical triangle. This has each of its points as a key element. Those could include the writer, audience, or text. The audience for a speech is present, … Continue reading

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“Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences” – Blog Post 4

In “Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences”, Andrea A. Lunsford talks about the rhetorical triangle. It’s an idea that there are three main points to writing; writers, audience, and text. The writer brings up a man named Walter Ong. He … Continue reading

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“Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences”

In the essay “Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences,” by Andrea A. Lusford’s main idea was that the rhetorical triangle has key elements for writing. It is the characteristic of writing to catch the main points. The rhetorical triangle carries … Continue reading

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Blog #4

In Andrea Lunsford’s “Writing Addresses, Invokes, and/or Creates Audiences”, she explains why connecting to your audience is important. The rhetorical triangle is the writer, audience, and text that develops meaning in writing. Lunsford says that writers will imagine their audiences … Continue reading

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Blog post #3

In the text “Writing Expresses and Shares Meaning to Be Reconstructed by the Reader” by Charles Bazerman, he argues that although a piece of writing can be the immediate emotions of the writers themselves, it is often misinterpreted by the … Continue reading

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Writing Expresses and Shares Meaning to be Reconstructed by the Reader

In this article written by Charles Bazerman, he explains that by writing, we can communicate through a medium of written words. The expression of writing makes them clearer to the readers, where they can attempt to make sense of the … Continue reading

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