The screen on this device is not wide enough to display Theory Resources. Try rotating the device to landscape orientation to see if more options become available.
Resources available to all users:
Resources available only to registered instructors who are logged in:
Information for Instructors. Read more
Resources
by Type
Instructors can get additional
resources. Read more
New to Theory Resources?
Find out more in this
short video overview (3:01).
From the Instructors Manual, with additional notes from the authors
List mode: Normal (click on theory name to show detail) | Show All details | Clear details
Chapter 22—The Rhetoric
The chapter offers increased clarity of the nature and role of logos, pathos, and ethos. Although the description of Aristotle’s rhetoric remains consistent, the chapter is restructured around a new example. Replacing Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, the authors now focus the chapter around Barack Obama’s commencement address at Notre Dame. Though changing the illustrative speech means the chapter reads very differently and is more contemporary, the essence of Aristotle’s rhetoric—logos, ethos, pathos and the canons of rhetoric—continue to be the centerpiece of the chapter. In their critique, the authors position The Rhetoric squarely in the middle between interpretive and empirical theories.
You can access Changes for a particular chapter in several ways:
Resources
by Type
Instructors can get
additional resources.
Read more
New to Theory
Resources?
Find out more
in this short
video overview
(3:01).
From the Instructors Manual, with additional notes from the authors
List mode: Normal (click on theory name to show detail) | Show All details | Clear details
Chapter 22—The Rhetoric
The chapter offers increased clarity of the nature and role of logos, pathos, and ethos. Although the description of Aristotle’s rhetoric remains consistent, the chapter is restructured around a new example. Replacing Martin Luther King Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech, the authors now focus the chapter around Barack Obama’s commencement address at Notre Dame. Though changing the illustrative speech means the chapter reads very differently and is more contemporary, the essence of Aristotle’s rhetoric—logos, ethos, pathos and the canons of rhetoric—continue to be the centerpiece of the chapter. In their critique, the authors position The Rhetoric squarely in the middle between interpretive and empirical theories.
You can access Changes for a particular chapter in several ways:
Copyright © Em Griffin 2025 | Web design by Graphic Impact