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5: Analysis

  • Page ID
    348267
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    • 5.1: Summary vs Analysis
      This page clarifies the difference between summarization and analysis in academic writing, highlighting that summarization is an objective restatement of main ideas, while analysis offers a deeper examination of meaning. Using Disney's "Cinderella" as an example, it demonstrates how summarization can present key virtues, whereas analysis encourages critical questioning about the text's purpose.
    • 5.2: Rhetorical Analysis
      This page provides an overview of rhetoric as the art of persuasion, emphasizing the importance of context, audience, author, and historical setting in understanding communication. It highlights Aristotle's rhetorical appeals—logos, pathos, and ethos—and their significance in persuasive writing.
    • 5.3: Literary Analysis
      This page highlights the significance of writing literary analyses in literature courses, detailing structured approaches that include context-setting introductions, thematic evaluations, and personal conclusions. It covers various analytical forms and literary theories, emphasizing the subjective nature of theme identification.
    • 5.4: Short Story Analysis
      This page offers a detailed guide to analyzing short stories by highlighting key literary elements: setting, characterization, plot, narrator and point of view, conflict, climax, theme, and author’s style. It defines a short story as a concise narrative focused on a single event and explains how these elements enhance overall meaning.


    This page titled 5: Analysis is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Edgar Perez, Jenell Rae, Jacob Skelton, Lisa Horvath, & Sara Behseta (ASCCC Open Educational Resources Initiative) .