The visual essay “Apples to Oranges” by Claire Ironside presents the reader with a series of infographics displaying the environmental impact of industrially farmed, non-local produce. The author attempts to approach the audience using primarily facts and statistics. Despite these efforts, the essay lacks an explicit statement of the author’s argument, while the infographics used are ambiguous and misleading. The obscure images, lack of logical connections and absence of an explicit claim leave the reader more confused than persuaded. These problems require the reader to infer most of the information and context, which is contradictory to the purpose of a visual medium.
Responding to contemporary social issues, Helen Day's blog entry titled 'The Power of Ink' discusses the significant loss of sentiment be meaning in tattoos today. Addressed towards bloggers of young demographics, she attempts to persuade her readers to revert their mindset on the outlook of tattoos. Beginning in an affable yet stern tone, the writer establishes her contention with bold words to capture the audience's attention and alert them of the arguments to come. She establishes her piece with anecdotal and historical examples. She asserts that tattoos today lack any significant meaning as opposed to earlier times in history.
Sherry Turkle has quite an interesting view on today`s “wired” world and the concept of being alone together. Therefore, the author is clearly convinced that the world of technology has deprived us of some of the most basic social skills. Although technology can literally grant us unlimited access to the information of the world in which we live today, I too consider that technology does represent a danger on the way we use to socialize before and now. As a result, Turkle does a marvelous job of introducing her beliefs as well as what it could be consider strong evidence to convince her readers making her argument a reasoning sound. It is quite clear that the author showcases Ethos by displaying clear evidence on both areas; logos and ethos.
That’s why the future of knowledge and culture no longer lies in books or newspapers or TV shows or radio programs or records or CDs. It lies in digital files shot through our universal medium at the speed of light” (89). By looking at great monuments of culture over time, all of those people were not connected to the internet, which made their mind much more attentive because they were able to engage in deep concentration. To be able to preserve this, we have to be determined to practice that “old” way of
The rapid expansion of technological growth is immersing our culture. The Nathan Jurgenson’s “The IRL Fetish”, argues that people have weird obsessions about the offline. Technological advances allow people to experience the online, but Jurgenson realizes that people are also fetishizing the movement against the online. People and novelists who complain the online world laments, “Writer after writer laments the loss of a sense of disconnection, of boredom (now redeemed as a respite from anxious info-cravings) …” (Jurgenson 127).
For this semester, we read The New Jim Crow: Mass Incarceration in the Age of Colorblindness by Michelle Alexander. The book talks about how minorities face, especially black men, being treated like second-class citizens by the criminal justice system and this leading to our modern mass incarceration problem. Alexander goes as far as to say “We have not ended racial caste in America; we have merely redesigned it” (2). This is shown by the War on Drugs.
The author provides clear explanation on the issue at hand, which is how the internet make isolated or close-minded. Now days, everybody has a way to be connected to the worldwide web. The issue at hand affects everybody in the world. Whether, someone is 14-year-old or much older a 24-year-old. The author started the essay with giving examples about how people so closely connected to their beliefs, that they aren’t willing to change it by any means.
Technology has enabled new ways of measuring ourselves. “In a meme’s-eye view of the world, any idea – from religious belief or a political affiliation to a new style of jeans or a catchy tune – can be seen as a sort of independent agent loosed into the population, where it travels from mind to mind, burrowing into each, colonizing all as widely and ruthlessly as it can” (Wasik, 479). The evolution of Wasik’s very original kind of performance was all made due to our ability to discover the importance of individuality. With technology people alienate themselves from one another. Wasik’s experiment created a sense of community, transformed methods of communication, and allowed those participating a moment of freedom and to experience forms of
Technology and media have been a vital part of the modern society; many cannot imagine life without technology. In "What is The Self" by Csikszentmihalyi, the author discusses the evolution of the ideal self by utilizing examples of people, objects and advancements from different time periods, environments, cultures and societies. On the other hand, the author of "Who Am We" Sherry Turkle expresses on the effects of the internet and cyber world on components of the self, life and society. She discusses how technology has revolutionized the nature of human thinking, feeling, ideas and identity. Even though technology and media fragments the reality of the self, it is an integral part of constructing the self as it preserves the identity from
This issue attracts my attention because I am fascinated with how technology affects our modern day world and the effects that it has imposed on society in recent years as well as the possible effects it can bare in the future. The article in itself brought light to my attention because it is actually proposing that technology holds benefits in our society. Most people today would argue that technology is deterring our abilities by making us too reliant, lazy, and perhaps even promoting antisocial behavior. However, I contend that it is actually leading our society to global innovations and discoveries by providing access to an enormous source of data and information. I would also argue that technology is increasing our ways of communication by means of social media networks as well advancing our cognitive capabilities by forcing us to keep up with artificial intelligence, a point which the author of this essay strongly expresses.
“No woman can call herself free who does not control her own body”. When Margaret Sanger spoke these words, she was expressing her belief on a woman’s right to have an abortion. This quote, however, speaks to the fact that women are oppressed on more than just abortions. In the novel, The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood, Atwood portrays the dehumanization of sexuality through both the characters and events within the novel, therefore proving that women will always be considered less than men will. Margaret Atwood was born in Ottawa, Ontario in 1939.
The author also illustrates the image of technology that how people are using without interacting each other. I agree with the author’s point that technology has a huge impact on our
With our electronic oriented society, society, while seemingly stoic, is constantly changing inch by inch. Social norms of the past, such as the color pink being better suited for younger men, which seemed to be concrete at the time, have eroded over time into entirely new ideologies. Popular culture will undoubtable play an important role in the creation of new mediums, but it will also undoubtedly be different in the near future. Society has been shown to have been challenged to a form of deep introspection from the introduction of The War of the World’s and 4’33, asking such questions as “Should society be utterly dependent on the radio” and “Can silence be truly a form of music?”. Even today’s society is being challenged by asking “What defines masculinity?”
Jack Massey Makenna Green Comp 1 7/13/2016 “The Whites Of Their Eyes” In The Whites Of Their Eyes Stuart Hall goes on to talk about certain race constructiveness in the media. The article then begins to talk about how the media poses a representation of multiple ideologies, and how these ideologies define race. Stuart Hall uses logos to attract the readers trust in the article, he also uses a little ethos to persuade his audience through character that what he’s writing is in fact an important matter.
It has been explored how news media abuse people with different skin colour or religion. For example how they portray black people and constantly associate them with terms like crime. This theory is supported by Diawara where he says, “This tends to leave a negative impression of the certain group in the audience’s mind and they are more likely to associate their future experiences based on their impression.” it is also evident by (couriermail.com) where states, “The new problem is social media – it’s easy for people to hide behind a mobile phone to make racial slurs,”. In other words, it is easy for people to use their mobile phone and by speaking be rude to people from different cultures .