Kyle D. Stedman has a specific move set in his article, “Annoying
Ways People Uses Sources”. He enjoys using parallelism to get his multiple
points across, for example his numbering of explanations when he compares
“1. They don’t know that the generally accepted practice of
high-way driving in the US is to move to the right if an upcoming car wants to
pass. Or,
2. They know the guidelines but don’t care” (Stedman 242)
and also when he goes over The Annoyances. Stedman always starts off with his made up title of
the annoyance, and then gives a
little example of what that literary annoyance is like in real life. After
effectively giving his audience something that they can imagine or relate to,
Stedman then introduces a passage that features that annoyance, and clearly examines why the passage features the given annoyance. After presenting these
facts, Stedman always uses “The Fix:” to
teach his audience how to turn the annoyance into a work of art. Stedman uses a
lot of parallelism and for every single one of his annoyances, he follows the
same order, 1. Name of annoyance, 2. Relatable experience or an image, 3. An example
in writing of the annoyance, and 4. How to fix the annoyance. Stedman also uses
a lot of bolded words and italics in his writing in order to keep the attention
of his audience, which works quite well. His italics highlight the key points
of the annoyance and his bolded words show what he has changed in his fix of
the bad passage. These italics and bolded sentences express themselves more
firmly onto the reader, which allows them to better understand the changes that
Stedman is trying to teach. Stedman also writes as if he’s write next to you
and talking to you, much like a teacher talks to a classroom, which is also
extremely effective. The way he writes allows the reader to get a great grasp
of the knowledge and stay entertained through the whole thing. With a
combination of jokes, corniness, and knowledge, Stedman effectively gets
through to the reader and enlightens them on how to use sources more
completely. He also uses colloquial language to help enthrall the reader,
allowing better absorption of his text.
While Stedman is fun to read throughout the whole reading,
Rosenberg starts off beautifully in the beginning, but her writing starts
deteriorating after the section, If At
First You Fall Asleep. Rosenberg starts off as if she’s writing a story,
illustrating the first years of her college life, she writes through personal
experience, and relates to the reader through her similes, metaphors, and
personification. She expresses her love for reading and many hours reading in
the “overstuffed red chair in the library that enveloped [her] like the lap of
a department store Santa” (Rosenberg 210). But once she reached the English
texts, she “curled up, opened a book on the Chinese Revolution, started
reading, and fell asleep” (210). She then shows her lack of concentration on
the reading by depicting herself holding on for a couple paragraphs, and then
day dream. With her similes, metaphors, personification, and especially her
vivid details, she relates to the audience, describing the dread of reading
academic texts and then appearing as a savior by offering tips on how to make
the reading of academic texts more enjoyable.
Everything
falls apart after that section, once she starts the next section, the reading
is near unbearable, she rambles on about how reading a scholarly work is a
conversation, and multiple examples on how it becomes a conversation. The next
section is where it actually becomes helpful, Rosenberg also uses bolds in her
writing, and she bolds everything that the reader should look at or think
through. After bolding the word that Rosenberg wants her audience to focus on,
she then goes on to show why that works. She gives little tips and tricks that
she learned after her seven years of college.
Rosenberg
and Stedman both wrote terrific pieces, but Stedman’s piece was by far the
best. His understanding of the current student is great, and he’s very good at
keeping his audience’s attention with his colloquial language, parallelism, short
entertaining stories that relate to the reader, and corniness. His piece of
work was much more entertaining than Rosenberg’s was, which had a lot to do
with the spacing. Each annoyance of his was short and to the point, telling you
a story, then a passage of it being wrong, and finally how to fix the problem.
His brilliance in keeping his audience fascinated was through the simplicity of
his text and his straight to the point writing style. Rosenberg would have been
a much more entertaining read if she had used more dashes, and more spaces in
her text. If she had had more paragraphs and borrowed some of the ideas that
Stedman used, her piece would have been Justas interesting as Stedman’s.
Brian, I really enjoyed your writing in this piece. I enjoyed how you used Stedman's bolded words in your writing. You are very correct, they did catch my attention and kept me engaged. I also agree with your comments on Rosenberg's writing. I loved how well you broke up each piece, it really worked. Also, the layout of your blog was great, and your move of numbering off Stedman's methods was great. Keep doing this man.
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