Monday, September 16, 2019
Language and Composition Prompts Essay
1981The Rattlerâ⬠- analyze effect on reader ââ¬â consider organization, point of view, language, detail. George Bernard Shaw letter ââ¬â describe writerââ¬â¢s attitude toward mother & her cremation ââ¬â diction and detailThomas Szasz ââ¬â argue for or against his position on the struggle for definition. Use readings, study, or experience. 1982A reading on happiness ââ¬â summarize his reasons for his opinion and explain why you agree or not with his opinion Analyze the strategies or devices (organization, diction, tone, detail) that make Gov. Stevensonââ¬â¢s Cat Veto argument effective. Describe a place, conveying feeling through concrete and specific detail. 1983A quote on change ââ¬â Select a change for the better that has occurred or that you want to occur; analyze its desirable and undesirable effects Excerpt from Thomas Carlyleââ¬â¢s Past and Present ââ¬â define Carlyleââ¬â¢s attitude toward work and analyze how he uses language to convinceâ⬠¦. Agree or disagree with the position in the passage on living in an era of language inflation by considering the ethical and social consequences of language inflation. 1984Explain the nature and importance of two or three means by which you keep track of time and discuss how these means reveal your person. (Hint given about ââ¬Å"inner clocks. â⬠) Percy Bysshe Shelley and John Milton ââ¬â two very short quotes on freedom ââ¬â describe the concept of freedom in each; discuss the differences. A passage on a boxing match between Benny Paret, a Cuban, and Emile Griffith ââ¬â Analyze how diction, syntax, imagery, and tome produce an effect on the reader. 1985Contrast stylistic and rhetorical differences between two passages on the Soviet Launch of the first space satellite Discuss the probable reasons for an anonymous writerââ¬â¢s additions and deletions and the ways in which those revisions change the effect of the paragraph. Two drafts that record the writerââ¬â¢s thoughts on how the experience of war affected his attitude toward language. Defend a position or one or more issues raised in the passage about the state of television in the United States. 1986Explain how two passages by N. Scott Momaday and Dee Brown, which describe similar landscapes, reveal the differences in the authorsââ¬â¢ purposes. Consider diction, syntax, imagery, and tone. Choose one or more pairs of words from a list and discuss and elaborate on the distinctions between the paired words. Consider how, when, why, and by whom each word might be used. Evaluate the truth of the assertion in the quotation that human nature wants patterns, standards, and structures of behavior. 1987Agree or disagree with E. M. Forsterââ¬â¢s view that personal relations are more important than causes or patriotism. Analyze how Zora Neale Hurston enriches our sense of her childhood world through her diction and manipulation of point of view. Describe some major features of the language used in one specific group ââ¬â occupational, ethnic, social, or age, etc. Indicate the purpose these features serve or what influences they reflect. 1988Evaluate Alexis De Tocquevilleââ¬â¢s assertions about democracy and aristocracy and his assertion that democracy ââ¬Å"throws [man] back forever upon himself alone. â⬠Analyze Frederick Douglassââ¬â¢ language, especially the figures of speech and syntax, to convey his states of mind upon escaping slavery and arriving in New York in 1838. Pretend to contribute to a magazine or newspaper; write an article describing a place you know well that might be of interest to readers. Define the significance, use descriptive detail to make attitude clear. 1989Argue for or against the validity of the implied criticism of a church bulletin [text given] reprinted without other comment in a magazine under the heading ââ¬Å"The Religious Life. â⬠Describe the rhetorical purpose of Martin Luther Kingââ¬â¢s Why We Canââ¬â¢t Wait. Analyze its stylistic, narrative, and persuasive devices. Missing 1990From an autobiography of a professional woman pilot in Africa, analyze how the authorââ¬â¢s juxtaposition of ideas, choice of details, and other aspects of style reveal her personality. Analyze stylistic and rhetorical differences between two nineteenth century descriptions of the Galapagos IslandsVividly and concretely describe one person seen at two different times or in two different situations so readers understand the difference in your attitude, thus proving perceptions of people differ according to peopleââ¬â¢s attitudes and circumstances 1991Analyze the language and rhetorical devices Igor Stravinsky uses to convey his point of view about orchestra conductors. Analyze how Richard Rodriquezââ¬â¢s presentation of the events in the passage suggests his attitude toward his family and himself. Consider narrative structure, detail, manipulation of language, and tone. Write a persuasive essay that defends, challenges, or qualifies the assertion that ââ¬Å"For in much wisdom is much grief, and increase of knowledge is increase of sorrowâ⬠(Ecclesiastes). 1992Analyze Queen Elizabeth Iââ¬â¢s diction, imagery, and sentence structure to achieve her purpose in her speech to her troops at Tilbury, 1588. Using your observation, experience, or reading, defend, challenge, or qualify Joseph Addisonââ¬â¢s assertion that men use ridicule to ââ¬Å"laugh men out of virtue and good sense. â⬠Considering the choice of the word ââ¬Å"crippleâ⬠and other rhetorical features, such as tone, word choice, and rhetorical structure, analyze how Nancy Mairs, who has multiple sclerosis, presents herself. 1993Compare the rhetorical strategies ââ¬â such as arguments, assumptions, attitudes, diction ââ¬â used by characters from Jane Austen (1813) and Charles Dickens (1865). Comment on both intended and probable effects of the proposals on the women being addressedDefend, challenge, or qualify H. L. Menckenââ¬â¢s views about the artistââ¬â¢s relation to society. Refer to particular writers, composers, or other artists. Read the paragraph for E. M. Forsterââ¬â¢s 1936 essay ââ¬Å"My Wood. â⬠Define E. M. Forsterââ¬â¢s attitude toward the experience of owning property and analyze that attitude; consider Forsterââ¬â¢s word choice, manipulation of sentences, and use of Biblical Allusions 1994From an excerpt of Sir George Savileââ¬â¢s essay about King Charles II (1630 ââ¬â 1685), define the attitude Savile would like us to adopt about Charles II and analyze the rhetorical strategies employed to promote that attitude. Defend, challenge, or qualify Barbara Tuchmanââ¬â¢s claim that ââ¬Å"wooden- headedness plays a remarkably large role â⬠¦ in human affairs. â⬠Use evidence and/or your observations. (From The March of Folly)Characterize and analyze Joan Didionââ¬â¢s view of the Santa Ana winds. Consider her stylistic elements, such as diction, imagery, syntax, structure, tone, and selection of detail. 1995In 1860, John Ruskin argued for giving precedence to the soldier rather than to the merchant or manufacturer. Evaluate his argument. (Excerpt included)Analyze the rhetorical techniques Ellen Goodman uses to convey her attitude toward Phil, the subject of her piece, ââ¬Å"The Company Man. â⬠After reading his paragraph, defend, challenge, or qualify James Baldwinââ¬â¢s ideas about the importance of language as a ââ¬Å"key to identityâ⬠and social acceptance. Use your observation, experience, or readings. 1996Read the passage from Lady Mary Wortley Montagueââ¬â¢s letter to her daughter. Analyze how Lady Mary (1689 ââ¬â 1762) uses rhetorical strategies and stylistic devices to convey her views about the role knowledge played in the lives of women of her time. Read the passage from A Summer Life and analyze some of the ways in which Gary Soto recreates the experience of his guilty six-year old self. Consider such devices as contrast, reputation, pacing, diction, and imagery. Using your own knowledge and experience, defend, challenge, or qualify Lewis Laphamââ¬â¢s view of ââ¬Å"the American faith in moneyâ⬠from Money and Class in America. (25 line excerpt included. ) 1997Read the passage from Meena Alexanderââ¬â¢s Fault Lines and analyze how Alexander uses language to explore and represent her fractured identity. Read the passage from the 1845 Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave, noting such elements as syntax, figurative language, and selection of detail. Write an essay in which you identify stylistic elements that distinguish third paragraph from the rest of the passage and discuss how that difference is significantUsing your own critical understanding of contemporary society, agree or disagree with Neil Postmanââ¬â¢s assertion that Aldous Huxleyââ¬â¢s vision of society in Brave New World is more relevant today than is George Orwellââ¬â¢s in 1984. 1998Paying particular attention to tone, analyze the techniques Charles Lamb uses to decline William Wordsworthââ¬â¢s invitation to visit him in the country. From Henry Jamesââ¬â¢s novel The Portrait of a Lady, read the conversation between Madame Merle and Isabel Archer, noting their conflicting views about what constitutes the self. In a persuasive essay, demonstrate which of the two conceptions of the self has greater validity. Use specific evidence from your observation, experience or reading. After reading the two letters between an executive of the Coca-Cola company and a representative of Grove Press, analyze the rhetorical strategies each writer uses to achieve his purpose and explain which letter offers the more persuasive case. 1999After reading two passages about Floridaââ¬â¢s Okefenokee Swamp, analyze how the distinctive style of each reveals the purpose of its writer. After reading the [3 columns long] opening from Jamaica Kincaidââ¬â¢s essay, ââ¬Å"On Seeing England for the First Time,â⬠analyze the rhetorical strategies Kincaid employs to convey her attitude toward England. After thinking about the implications of the excerpt from Antigone, explore the validity of the assertion that ââ¬Å"The only / Crime is pride. â⬠Use examples from your reading, observation, or experience. 2000Eudora Welty recalls reading and books that influenced her craft as a writer. Analyze how Weltyââ¬â¢s language conveys intensity and value of reading. George Mohandas Orwell uses Gandhi to argue for choosing human imperfection over sainthood. Analyze how Orwell criticizes Gandhiââ¬â¢s position & how Orwell develops his own position. Paraphrase King Learââ¬â¢s comment that wealth covers sin and injustice. Defend, challenge, or qualify his view of the relationship between wealth and justice. 2001George Eliotââ¬â¢s letter to an American woman M. F. Peirce. Analyze the rhetorical strategies Eliot uses to establish her position about the development of a writer. Analyze how Mary Oliverââ¬â¢s style about owls conveys the complexity of her response to nature. Support, refute, qualify Susan Sontagââ¬â¢s claim that photography limits understanding of the world. Use appropriate evidence. 2002Lincolnââ¬â¢s Second Inaugural Address was a short speech in which he contemplated the effects of the Civil War and offered his vision for the future. Analyze the rhetorical strategies Lincoln used to achieve his purpose. Analyze how Virginia Woolf uses language to convey the lasting significance of moments she recalls from her childhood spent in a seaside village in Cornwall, England. Support, refute, or qualify Czech writer Milan Kunderaââ¬â¢s claims as expressed in an excerpt from Testaments Betrayed. Use appropriate evidence. 2003Defend, challenge, qualify Neal Gablerââ¬â¢s assertion that entertainment has the capacity to ruin society. Analyze the methods of Alfred Greenââ¬â¢s 1861 speech to persuade his fellow African Americans to join the Union forces. Compare and contrast how John James Audubon and Annie Dillard each describe a flock of birds in flight and how they convey the birdsââ¬â¢ effect on the writer as observer. 2004Analyze how the rhetorical strategies used by Lord Chesterfield in his letter to his son revel his own values. Choose a controversial local, national, or global issue with which you are familiar and use appropriate evidence I an essay that carefully considers the opposing positions on this controversy ad proposes a solution or compromise. Analyze how Richard Rodriguez uses contrasts between central Mexico and California to convey and explore his conflicting feelings in an excerpt from Days of Obligation. 2005Passage from ââ¬Å"Training for Statesmanshipâ⬠by George Kennan. Select his most compelling observation and consider the extent to which that observation holds true. A mock press release from The Onion. Analyze the strategies used in the article to satirize how products are marketed to consumers. Peter Singer argues that prosperous people should donate to overseas aid organizations all money not needed for the basic requirements of life. Evaluate the pros and cons of his argument and indicate which position you find more persuasive. 2005 Form BLecture delivered in Boston in 1832 by Maria Stewart, African American educator and writer. Analyze the rhetorical strategies Stewart uses to convey her position. John Barry describes the complex mechanics of the Missippppi River in Rising Tide: Te Great Mississippi Flood of 1927 and How It Changed America. Analyze how Barry communications his fascination with the river to his readers. Passage from The Medusa and the Snail by Lewis Thomas. Drawing on your own reading and experience, write an essay that defends, challenges, or qualifies Thomasââ¬â¢s claims. 2006Jennifer Priceââ¬â¢s essay examines the popularity of the pink plastic flamingo in the 1950s. Analyze how Price crafts the text to reveal her view of U. S. culture. William Hazlittââ¬â¢s ââ¬Å"On the Want of Money. â⬠Analyze the rhetorical strategies he uses to develop his position about money. From talk radio to television w, to popular magazines to Web blogs ordinary citizens, political figures, and entertainers express their opinions on a wide range of topics. Take a position on the value of such public statements of opinion. 2006 Form BIn a well-written essay that draws upon your reading, experience, or observations for support, take position on the issue of compulsory voting. Passage from George Bernard Shawââ¬â¢s Saint Joan. Analyze the rhetorical strategies the Inquisitor uses to argue his case against Joan. Passage by philosopher Arthur Shopenhauer. Write an essay that defends, challenges, or qualifies one of Shopenhauerââ¬â¢s claims. 2007First Synthesis Question ââ¬â based on six sources, all about advertising. Develop a position on the effects of advertising and synthesize at least three of the sources for support. In Staying Put: Making a Home in a Restless World, Scott Russell Sanders responds to an essay by Salman Rushdie, both of which discuss the effect of mass migrations. Analyze the strategies Sanders uses to develop his perspective about moving. Develop a position on the ethics of offering incentives for charitable acts and support your position with evidence from your reading, observation, and/or experience. 2007 Form BBased on six sources concerning museum artifacts and decisions made to include a particular piece of art or an artifact. Develop a position on the most important considerations facing the person responsible for securing a new work of art or an artifact for a museum. Synthesize at least three of the sources for support. In the Introduction to Poison Penmanship: The Gentle Art of Muckraking, Jessica Mitford says that it is an honor to be considered a muckraker. Do you agree or do you think that journalists who search out and expose real or apparent misconduct go too far in the pursuit of their stories. Explain your position. Speech delivered by Wendell Phillips, a prominent white American abolitionist, praising Toussaint Louverture, Haitian liberator. Analyze the strategies the speaker uses to praise his subject and move his audience. 2008Based on seven sources concerning the elimination of the penny as the smallest American denomination. Develop a position on whether or not the penny should be eliminated and synthesize at least three of the sources for support. Passage from John M. Barryââ¬â¢s The Great Influenza. Analyze how Barry uses rhetorical strategies to characterize scientific research. Some people argue that corporate partnerships are a necessity for cash-strapped schools. Others argue that schools should provide an environment free from ads and corporate influence. Using appropriate evidence, write an essay in which you evaluate the pros and cons of corporate sponsorship fro schools and indicate why you find one position more persuasive than the other. 2008 Form BBased on six sources concerning a defined national school curriculum. Develop a position on whether or not there should be specific texts that all students of high school English should read. Synthesize at least three of the sources for support. Passage from ââ¬Å"America Needs Its Nerdsâ⬠by Leonid Fridman. Analyze how Fridman develops his argument. Read an excerpt from The Decline of Radicalism by Daniel Boorstin and consider the implications of the distinction Boorstin makes between dissent and disagreement. Defend, challenge, or qualify Boosrtinââ¬â¢s distinction. 2009Based on eight sources concerning space exploration. Develop a position about what issues should be considered most important in making decisions about space exploration and synthesize at least three of the sources for support. Two passages from Edwin Wilsonââ¬â¢s The Future of Life satirizing the language of two groups that hold opposing attitudes about environmentalism. Analyze how Wilsonââ¬â¢s satire illustrates the unproductive nature of such discussions. Write an essay that defends, challenges, or qualifies Horaceââ¬â¢s assertion that the role of adversity (financial or political hardship, danger, misfortune, etc. ) plays in developing a personââ¬â¢s character. Support your argument with evidence from your reading, observation, or experience 2009 Form BBased on seven sources concerning public education. Choose an issue related to the tension in schools between individuality and conformity. Write an essay in which you use this issue to argue the extent to which schools should support individuality or conformity. Synthesize at least three of the sources for support. Passage from ââ¬Å"The Indispensable Oppositionâ⬠by Walter Lippman. Analyze the strategies Lippman uses to develop his argument. Passage from The Worst Years of Our Lives by Barbara Ehrenreich, about life in the 1980s. Support, refute, or qualify Ehrenreichââ¬â¢s assertions about television.
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