Little Argument, A
$59.99
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Trade Discount | 5 + | 25% |
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Description
This remarkable, inexpensive guide packs a comprehensive look at writing (and analyzing) arguments into 200 brief, accessible pages. Best-selling authors Lester Faigley and Jack Selzer offer clear, engaging chapters covering what argument is, how to read (and view) arguments critically, how to write a variety of persuasive arguments, and how to support your arguments with good reasons and appropriate documentation.
· Two new student papers including a new definition argument on the status of college athletes as amateurs and a new causal argument on violence in video games (Chapter 3)
· Updated coverage of online research, including an expanded guide for how to find sources in databases (Chapter 5)
· A new discussion of argument as conversation (Chapter 1)
· New material on editing for style (Chapter 7)
Additional coverage of plagiarism including “patch plagiarism” and updated coverage of MLA documentation (Chapter 6)
1 Making an Effective Argument
What Exactly Is an Argument?
Writing Arguments in College
Think About Your Credibility
Arguments as Turns in a Conversation
2 Analyzing an Argument
What Is Rhetorical Analysis?
Build a Rhetorical Analysis
Analyze the Rhetorical Features
Analyze the Rhetorical Context
Analyze a Visual Argument
Write a Visual Analysis
Barbara Jordan, “Statement on the Articles of Impeachment”
You Try It: Write a rhetorical analysis
3 Writing an Argument
Find a Topic That Interests You
Feature: What is not arguable
Explore Your Topic
Read About Your Topic
Feature: Recognize fallacies
Find Good Reasons
Find Evidence to Support Good Reasons
State and Evaluate Your Thesis
Think About Your Readers
Organize Your Argument
Write an Engaging Title and Introduction
Write a Strong Conclusion
4 Constructing an Argument
Definition Arguments
Understand how definition arguments work
Recognize kinds of definitions
Build a definition argument
Sample student definition argument
Patrice Conley, “Flagrant Foul: The NCAA’s Definition of Student Athletes as Amateurs”
You Try It: Write a definition argument
Causal Arguments
Understand how causal arguments work
Find causes
Build a causal argument
Sample student causal argument
Armandi Tansel, “Modern Warfare: Video Games’ Link to Real-World Violence”
You Try It: Write a causal argument
Evaluation Arguments
Understand how evaluation arguments work
Recognize kinds of evaluations
Build an evaluation argument
You Try It: Write an evaluation argument
Rebuttal Arguments
Understand how rebuttal arguments work
Recognize the tactics of rebuttal arguments
Build a rebuttal argument
You Try It: Write a rebuttal argument
Proposal Arguments
Understand how proposal arguments work
Recognize components of proposal arguments
Build a proposal argument
Sample student proposal argument
Kim Lee, “Let’s Make It a Real Melting Pot with Presidential Hopes for All”
You Try It: Write a proposal argument
5 Researching an Argument
Find a Subject
Think about possible questions
Browse a subject directory
Browse a general or specialized encyclopedia
Ask a Research Question and Gather Information
Find information about the subject
Interviews
Surveys
Observations
Draft a Working Thesis
Find Sources
Search with keywords
Find sources in databases
Find sources on the Web
Find print sources
Evaluate Sources
Evaluate print and database sources
Evaluate Web sources
6 Documenting an Argument
Avoid Plagiarism
What you don’t have to document
What you do have to document
Use caution with online source material
Quote Sources without Plagiarizing
Quoting directly using quotation marks
Attribute every quotation
Quote words that are quoted in your source with single quotation marks
Summarize and Paraphrase Sources without Plagiarizing
Summarize
Paraphrase
Incorporate Quotations
Document Sources in MLA Style
How to cite a source in your paper
How to cite an entire work, a Web site, or another electronic source
Create an MLA-style works-cited list
Sample MLA paper: Brian Witkowski, “Need a Cure for Tribe Fever? How About a Dip in the Lake?”
7 Revising an Argument
Evaluate Your Draft
Respond to the Writing of Others
Edit and Proofread Carefully
Credits and Index
This remarkable, inexpensive guide packs a comprehensive look at writing (and analyzing) arguments into 200 brief, accessible pages. Best-selling authors Lester Faigley and Jack Selzer offer clear, engaging chapters covering what argument is, how to read (and view) arguments critically, how to write a variety of persuasive arguments, and how to support your arguments with good reasons and appropriate documentation. This remarkable, inexpensive guide packs a comprehensive look at writing (and analyzing) arguments into 200 brief, accessible pages. Best-selling authors Lester Faigley and Jack Selzer offer clear, engaging chapters covering what argument is, how to read (and view) arguments critically, how to write a variety of persuasive arguments, and how to support your arguments with good reasons and appropriate documentation.
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Brief (200 pages) and clear, A Little Argument packs both overview and specific strategies into one small, inexpensive package.
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Chs 1 and 2 (Making an Effective Argument, and Reading Arguments) offer students concise definitions and strategies to help them understand this complex topic.
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Chs 3 and 4 (Writing and Constructing an Argument) guide students step by step through the most commonly-used ways of creating arguments–arguments based on definition, cause, evalution, rebuttal, and proposal.
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Chs 5 and 6 (Researching and Documenting an Argument) show students how to settle on a topic, research it, and document sources appropriately.
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Ch 7 offers specific strategies for revising an argument.
Additional information
Dimensions | 0.50 × 5.40 × 7.40 in |
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Subjects | english, argument, composition, higher education, Language Arts / Literacy, This remarkable, inexpensive , guide packs a comprehensive look at writing (and analyzing) arguments into 200 brief, accessible pages. , Best-selling  |