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What makes a speech distinctive? (1 Viewer)

Aysce

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Hello my fellow standarders, what makes a speech distinctive? All I know is that it's memorable, and that it's distinctive based on the context in which it is delivered. If anyone can have any idea of what other things I should talk about or things that make it distinctive, please post. I'm rather unsure of what to write for my upcoming assessment :/ Thanks !
 

Shadowdude

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Hello my fellow standarders, what makes a speech distinctive? All I know is that it's memorable, and that it's distinctive based on the context in which it is delivered. If anyone can have any idea of what other things I should talk about or things that make it distinctive, please post. I'm rather unsure of what to write for my upcoming assessment :/ Thanks !
Read an essay, read a speech on the same topic. You figure it out. It's quite simple, really.
 

OzKo

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A speech shouldn't be an essay which is just read.
 

PaterzAttack

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ugh... distinctive voice?
what a bitch of a topic

start by analysing the rhetoric of the speech
and from there you should get an idea of what to write for your assessment

this is a fairly good guide:
What is the rhetorical situation?

What occasion gives rise to the need or opportunity for persuasion?
What is the historical occasion that would give rise to the composition of this text?

Who is the author/speaker?

How does he or she establish ethos (personal credibility)?
Does he/she come across as knowledgeable? fair?
Does the speaker's reputation convey a certain authority?

What is his/her intention in speaking?

To attack or defend?
To exhort or dissuade from certain action?
To praise or blame?
To teach, to delight, or to persuade?

Who make up the audience?

Who is the intended audience?
What values does the audience hold that the author or speaker appeals to?
Who have been or might be secondary audiences?
If this is a work of fiction, what is the nature of the audience within the fiction?

What is the content of the message?

Can you summarize the main idea?
What are the principal lines of reasoning or kinds of arguments used?
What topics of invention are employed?
How does the author or speaker appeal to reason? to emotion?

What is the form in which it is conveyed?

What is the structure of the communication; how is it arranged?
What oral or literary genre is it following?
What figures of speech (schemes and tropes) are used?
What kind of style and tone is used and for what purpose?

How do form and content correspond?

Does the form complement the content?
What effect could the form have, and does this aid or hinder the author's intention?

Does the message/speech/text succeed in fulfilling the author's or speaker's intentions?

For whom?
Does the author/speaker effectively fit his/her message to the circumstances, times, and audience?
Can you identify the responses of historical or contemporary audiences?

What does the nature of the communication reveal about the culture that produced it?

What kinds of values or customs would the people have that would produce this?
How do the allusions, historical references, or kinds of words used place this in a certain time and location?
taken from: http://rhetoric.byu.edu/pedagogy/rhetorical analysis heuristic.htm

also what riproot said:
Read the distinctive speeches rubric and then go from there.
Also, lots of aural techniques and stuff.
and also check out hsc online if you haven't done so already
http://hsc.csu.edu.au/english/standard/language/elect1/3797/working_with_distinctive.htm
 

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