| Is the sign really necessary? from chain e-mail |
| From chain e-mail |
When I received a chain e-mail full of pictures from my mom the other day as I was stressing about a test, I realized that this is a wonderful example of rhetoric. The purpose behind these pictures is making people laugh, a perfect cure for the melancholy caused by a bad day. The bad day is the exigence- a state that friends and family members want to change. In the above example, my mom acted the part of the rhetor by using photographic discourse targeted at pathos- emotions- to lighten my mood.
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| mandyseyfang at flickr.com |
Another example that confirmed this view is The Blue Day Book by Bradley Trevor Greive. It is literally a book full of amusing animal pictures with captions to add even more hilarity. The effect is to lighten a blue day- obviously judging by its title that is exactly the rhetorical purpose for which the book was created.
Just a suggestion, but next time you are in a funk, get on-line and start typing “funny” into the Google image search browser. It will give you all sorts of suggestions- funny cats, funny dogs, funny pictures, funny signs. Pick your favorite. It’s amazing what a few minutes of grinning can do to turn a frown-filled day around.

Love love love your post. It is true. A picture speaks a thousand words! There is this website I think it is called like ee cards or something and they have the most sarcastic, crude sayings for anything you could imagine! If you like that just search the site you'll have a blast. I find myself "loling" all the time.
ReplyDeleteI think my children have mounted a similar "step stool" to drink directly out of the water dispenser on our refrigerator.
ReplyDeleteAw, I love animal pictures, and funny pictures in general too! They definitely put me in a good mood.
ReplyDelete