Tuesday, September 2, 2008

Argument Genre Comparison

The cartoon on page 1 and the ad on page 24 depict two very different points of view. Both are effective, but how effective they are depends on the audience.

The cartoon shows a fat man telling a starving man not to consume the genetically modified food. To a glancing reader, this would probably have more impact than the advertisement. It makes the point in a very concise manner, and it is designed to pull on the heartstrings of the sympathetic. Regardless of my own opinions of genetically modified food, this certainly caught my attention. In trying to pusuade an audience, the chosen genre is excellent if targeting the fast-paced American. However, the argument is also hurt by the genre. It fails to acknowledge the gray area in the argument, using exclusively pursuasive arguments, rather than truth seeking. When faced with a situation of giving a man genetically altered food or letting him starve, no one would even stop to think about it. It's not a practical way to end world hunger, but that's an entirely new argument. A person who would pause to think about the cartoon would realize this, and it would suddenly lose much of its meaning.

The ad also suffers from the problem the cartoon has; its content is rooted exclusively in a sinle opinion. However, it does give more evidence to its cause than the cartoon does. The photo draws attention from passer-bys, and the brief article beneath it succinctly summarizes the agenda of whoever posted the ad.

Although both genres are primarily pursuasive arguments, the ad is more pursuasive because it presents the information in a way that makes it appear as though it has more truthful evidence. Whether it is more truthful is debatable, but it is more likely to alter peoples' opinions because of how the information is presented.

2 comments:

Erin Healey said...

Abby,
I disagree about your point that the cartoon catches the eyes of more people. I am more inclined to read the ad because I know that they usually have more information. It is faster for me to take the time to read the ad then to read the cartoon and research facts about it. I agree with the point about both pieces only displaying one argument. It would be interesting to see what the other side of the argument would look like displayed in a cartoon or ad.

Annalee said...

Elmo,
I understand your point of view, and your presentation was very nice, but I don't agree with your argument. I don't believe that the cartoon creates any sort of argument. I think the cartoon only presents a giant bias, that isn't supported with any facts. However, I liked your essay anyway!