Rhetorical Analysis Of Catherine St Louis

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Catherine Saint Louis is a writer who is constantly writing about issues in health. This article is titled Pregnant Women Turn to Marijuana, Perhaps Harming Infants, published on February 2, 2017. It tells a story about a young women named Stacey who is smoking marijuana while pregnant. Catherine’s purpose in this article is to spread awareness to the world bringing the dramatic issue of destroying infants little by little that have not yet been born. This is a big issue and women don’t seem to understand it. Catherine uses the three main rhetorical points to really state her purpose. By using ethos, pathos, and logos, she explains thoroughly the main issue of this article and ties the reader in to interest him or her even more. She first …show more content…

It ties and convinces the reader to believe what the author believes. For example, “Prenatal exposure can affect the adolescent pretty significantly,” said Dr. Lauren M. Jansson, the director of pediatrics at the Center for Addiction and Pregnancy at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine.” Catherine, by using the main issue affect infants, it gives readers a sense of compassion and worry. Realizing that there are mothers that are exposing their little ones to drugs inside their wombs makes the audience nervous thinking of the mothers as worthless and negligent. “In male fetuses who were exposed, for instance, researchers have noted abnormal function of the amygdala, the part of the brain that regulates emotion.” This tells readers that infants that are exposed to drugs this soon, they are born with defects. This gives the audience the ability to feel angry and upset that mothers are allowing this, because of their ignorance. This ties the reader even more in, because they are able to feel what the author is …show more content…

Catherine uses this to make her article legit and believable. “In the federal survey, published online in December, almost 4 percent of mothers-to-be said they had used marijuana in the past month in 2014, compared with 2.4 percent in 2002.” Catherine uses a survey and statistics/numbers to show readers that this issue was experimented, making this a reliable source. It gives them the certainty that this is a true issue that even goes through federal authority. Use this as an another example. “Prenatal exposure can affect the adolescent pretty significantly,” said Dr. Lauren M. Jansson, the director of pediatrics at the Center for Addiction and Pregnancy at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. In male fetuses who were exposed, for instance, researchers have noted abnormal function of the amygdala, the part of the brain that regulates emotion.” Catherine gives us the point of view of experts in the field and high ranked schools to support her issue. By using information, it lets the reader know that this is real and