PWR 1GDM: Writing & Rhetoric 1: Revolution and Revolt: Political Writing for Political Action
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. See
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/undergrad/cgi-bin/drupal_ual/AP_univ_req_PWR_Courses.html.
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GDS: Writing & Rhetoric 1: From Trash Talk to Toxic Discourse: Rhetorics of Waste
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. See
https://undergrad.stanford.edu/programs/pwr/courses/pwr-1.
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GEM: Writing & Rhetoric 1: The Rhetoric of Foodie Culture
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. See
https://undergrad.stanford.edu/programs/pwr/courses/pwr-1.
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GER: Writing & Rhetoric 1: The Rhetoric of Social Media
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. Exploration of the multifaceted and hypertextual rhetoric of social media, the intersection between rhetoric and social media, and how new types of online media have heightened participation, openness, and a sense of community. See
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/undergrad/cgi-bin/drupal_ual/AP_univ_req_PWR_Courses.html
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GEV: Writing & Rhetoric 1: All the World's a Stage: The Rhetoric of Theater
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. Students investigate the role theater plays in the rhetorical strategies of various literary and non-literary texts as well as visual materials such as films and cartoons. See
http://ual.stanford.edu/AP/univ_req/PWR/Req.html.
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GFL: Writing & Rhetoric 1: From Con Artists to Catfish: The Rhetoric of Trickery
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. See
https://undergrad.stanford.edu/programs/pwr/courses/pwr-1.
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GGH: Writing & Rhetoric 1: Understanding American Political Speeches of the 20th and 21st Centuries
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. Rhetorical analyses of speeches by a range of 20th-century American political figures and the political rhetoric of the present day. See
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/undergrad/cgi-bin/drupal_ual/AP_univ_req_PWR_Courses.html
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GGK: Writing & Rhetoric 1: Ladies, Tramps, and Other Furry Friends: The Rhetoric of Pets
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. See
https://undergrad.stanford.edu/programs/pwr/courses/pwr-1.
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GGZ: Writing & Rhetoric 1: The Rhetoric of Race in American Cinema
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. See
https://undergrad.stanford.edu/programs/pwr/courses/pwr-1.
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
PWR 1GIF: Writing & Rhetoric 1: Dark Humor: A Rhetoric of Social Taboos
Rhetorical and contextual analysis of readings; research; and argument. Focus is on development of a substantive research-based argument using multiple sources. Individual conferences with instructor. Study of dark humor as it deals with the most delicate subject matter, topics we designate as sacred and beyond criticism: violence and bodily damage, illness, aging and death, race and ethnicity, and gender and sexuality. See
http://www.stanford.edu/dept/undergrad/cgi-bin/drupal_ual/AP_univ_req_PWR_Courses.html
| UG Reqs: Writing 1
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