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The Language of Composition Chapter 2: Close Reading: The Art and Craft of Analysis

The Language of Composition Chapter 2: Close Reading: The Art and Craft of Analysis. AP English Language and Composition. Close Reading. Close Reading is the process of analyzing a text at the diction level to develop a greater understanding .

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The Language of Composition Chapter 2: Close Reading: The Art and Craft of Analysis

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  1. The Language of CompositionChapter 2: Close Reading: The Art and Craft of Analysis AP English Language and Composition

  2. Close Reading • Close Reading is the process of analyzing a text at the diction level to develop a greater understanding. • Deeper understanding is derived from the connotative meanings of these words.

  3. Close Reading • Writing about close reading reverses this process, starting with the deeper understanding and then supporting that understanding by addressing the “smaller details,” via the words used.

  4. Close Reading • Close reading is an instinctive process that we undertake daily. • In a personal conversation, we always ask ourselves: • “What’s his purpose?” • “What’s she after?”

  5. Close Reading • We take into account the context of the situation. • Has anything significant just happened to prompt the conversation?

  6. Close Reading • We take into account more subtle elements: • Body language • Facial Expressions • Gestures • Tone of Voice

  7. Speaker Ethos Logos Audience Subject Pathos Close Reading • Close Reading requires a return to the Rhetorical Triangle. • These elements help establish Ethos, Logos, and Pathos with the audience.

  8. Analysis of Style • Understanding style provides insight into the choices the author makes at the diction and syntax levels.

  9. Analysis of Style • Style is the author’s use of tone, sentence structure,and vocabulary. • Style can be divided into two categories: • Tropes = use of diction. • Schemes = use of syntax.

  10. Key Questions for the Analysis of Diction 1. Which of the important words in the passage (verbs, nouns, adjectives, and adverbs) are general and abstract? Which are specific and concrete?

  11. Key Questions for the Analysis of Diction 2. Are the important words formal, informal, colloquial, or slang? 3. Are some words non-literal or figurative, creating figures of speech such as metaphors?

  12. Key Questions for the Analysis of Syntax 1. What is the order for the parts of the sentence? Is it the usual (subject-verb-object), or is it inverted?

  13. Key Questions for the Analysis of Syntax 2. Which part of speech is more prominent – nouns or verbs?

  14. Key Questions for the Analysis of Syntax 3. What are the sentences like? • Are they periodic (moving toward something important), or • Are they cumulative (adding details that support an important idea in the beginning of the sentence)?

  15. Key Questions for the Analysis of Syntax 4. How does the sentence connect its words, phrases, and clauses?

  16. Speaker Audience Subject Rhetorical Analysis • Rhetorical analysis is understanding how the author connects the speaker, subject, and audience, and why the author makes the stylistic choices he/she makes.

  17. Rhetorical Analysis • Close reading is about identifying techniques and strategies (diction and syntactical choices), but it is also about understanding how these choices help to achieve the author’s overall purpose.

  18. Rhetorical Analysis • Analysis is about answering the “so what” question.

  19. Rhetorical Analysis • As an analyst, you must: 1. Determine the author’s purpose

  20. Rhetorical Analysis 2. Identify the author’s rhetorical choices 3. Explain the effect the author’s choices have on the meaning of the text

  21. Types of Close Reading • Annotation is a process of note taking in the text or on post-it notes in the margin of the text. • It’s the process of recording your inner discussion with the text.

  22. Annotations Here’s what to do: • Circle unfamiliar words • Identify main ideas: thesis statements and topic sentences • Identify words, phrases, or sentences that appeal to you or that confuse you

  23. Annotations • Look for figures of speech, tropes, schemes, imagery, and/or details • Identify contradictory phrases • Jot down questions or comments about the text

  24. Dialectical Journal • Dialectical Journal (Double-Entry Notebook) is a visual representation of the conversation between you and the text.

  25. Dialectical Journal • Dialectical Journals allow the reader to break the text up into smaller chunks. • This allows for greater analysis of the diction and syntax employed within the text.

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