Friday, February 28, 2014

Logos of 2+2=?

Many rhetorical skill are used in the lyrics of the song 2+2=? but the one being discussed in this post is logos. Logos use logic to try and understand things and figure out why things are significant in the song. These lyrics use logic to question the day to day rules of our world specifically the draft. Seger addresses the fact that maybe he's a fool for asking but why don't they change the rules. It doesn't make sense to him that they are sending young people off to war, taking them from their families, and forcing them to kill people. He acknowledges the fact that he is young but at the same time says that the rules are old and it's time to change them. In his mind if he has to kill people in order to live than something is wrong and needs to change. By questioning these things it forces the audience to use logic and attempt to figure out the answers to his questions. Simply asking something can cause change because if nothing is questioned there is no reason to do anything differently. He was a simple man encouraging everyone to find a simple answer to why these rules are in place and at the same time points out that there isn't much logic to these rules.

Guitar Battle: Pathos



This picture of an "on-stage battle of dueling guitars" between Carlos Santana and David Brown displays many rhetorical aspects.  This post is about the Pathos used in this picture from Woodstock.  This picture offers the idea of unity by using Pathos to illustrate a bond between these two men.  If you look at their body posture, you can tell that their heads are leaned towards each other, trying to be close.  If they didn't have some sort of bond, they could have just put there guitars close, still showing the intensity of the moment without being close to someone on a hot, sweaty stage.  Instead, they lean in and actually try to be close.  The author uses this feeling of comradely and extrapolates it to a feeling of unity through implication.  If these two men can be this close, despite their different races, and share this great bond, then you can at least get along with the person next to you, regardless of their skin color.

Guitar Battle: Logos

This picture of an "on-stage battle of dueling guitars" between Carlos Santana and David Brown displays many rhetorical aspects.  This post is about the Logos used in this picture from Woodstock.  The main logic applied here is reason.  Using the picture, the photographer (or who whoever he is taking the picture for) is using the rationale that if these two men can play guitars together, why can’t the audience at least accept the idea that the races can be equals.  He appeals to this idea by displaying to the audience different races doing an activity, making music, together.  It is implied that their unity can be applied to your daily life. Another piece of evidence that suggests the idea of unity are their clothes.  They have two pretty different outfits on, which normally means that they have two different lifestyles.  This shows that people who live differently can get along as well.  The author of this piece wants to put off a message of unity.  To do this, the author uses reasoning, which is Logos, to appeal to the audience. 

Thursday, February 27, 2014

Pathos as directed by Bob Seger

Pathos appeals to the emotional communication to the audience most commonly done through story telling or songs. Bob Seger's wrote a song entitled 2+2=?, a song of a war, a song that hits home for the audience of the time period. The 1960s brought more than just political movements and new challenges to overcome but also the fear of being drafted into war. Drafting was a serious topic of conversation, something most citizens were anticipating as each new day past. The lyrics from Bob Seger speak out about how lives are drastically changed and flipped upside down. Saying goodbye to family with hopes of returning to them one day soon was the only positive thoughts these men could endure. Pathos is a powerful tool of rhetoric allowing the audience to be emotionally affected by the words of others. 

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

Rock Battle Audience

The picture displayed here is of two guitarists at the Woodstock concert back in the '60s. The audience of this picture are people who attended the WoodStock Music Festival. Most of the people who went to this concert ranged starting at just the young age of 12. This picture was captured at a very important and historical era in America, as it displays the picture of two different races conjoining together for the benefit of others. Being the audience they are aware of the problems and issues that took place during this time when it came to segregation and racial issues. This picture represents more than two musicians “battling” it out at a rock concert, but rather takes into account the racial background they both come from. From this picture the audience is able to discuss the irony. It is an innocent rock battle while zoomed in but zoomed out during the same era it can tell a very different story

2+2=? Audience


Bob Seger’s song “2+2=?” is a war song that at the time spoke out to the people of the 1960s. The audience of this song spoke out to the teenager and young adults of the time period. The song's lyrics are direct feelings of how most of the teenagers of this time period felt and the events they had to go through. Being drafted into the war was a constant possibility where life would be normal one day and totally turned around the next. Not only does the song speak out to the soldiers  The song also reaches out to the families and friends of those soldiers because their life as well is directly effected. Luckily in today's time we as young adults are not faced with the possibility of being drafted into the war. The audience of the blog, University of Maryland students, are able to indirectly feel the emotions of the 1960s through this song. 

Rhetorical Situation of 2+2=?

This song is a very powerful piece by Bob Segar about the Vietnam War released in 1968. The lyrics are extremely moving as they question the laws of that time period. The draft became a big part of young boys lives as they never knew when their time would come to be sent off to war. This song acknowledges that maybe there is something wrong with this particular law or the expectations society has of people of such a young age. Segar then tells a story about a boy that left his girlfriend to go to war and is now dead because he was forced to kill and died as well. Now the girlfriend is left questioning everything much like many other families and friends that lost someone in the war. All these young children are deprived of their adolescent years and forced to grow up quickly. They are given a gun and told to kill regardless of their beliefs or desires. The 1960s were a time of change and questioning of laws that had been in place for a long time. Because of the 1960s our teenagers are able to grow up and go to college without the constant fear of having to take lives or having their lives taken from them or the ones they love.

Rhetorical Situation of the Guitar Battle

This picture depicts two guitarists dueling it out at Woodstock.  But, there is something about these guitarists that makes this picture important: their race.  The 60s were filled with social change and, although conditions for African Americas were improving, they were still not completely equal in the eyes of many.  At the time of the picture, the hippy movement is going strong and the hippies are participating in Woodstock, the epitome of "hippiness".  The hippies are a very laid-back people who are very loving and peaceful.  They, personally, had very little (if any) prejudice.  Because of this lifestyle, they pioneered many movements, including the civil rights movement.  This background created the situation in which this picture could be taken, where two guitarists are seen as equals, playing in front of thousands of people.