Post 06: Boyd's Use of Rhetoric
Boyd uses many rhetorical strategies in their essay, "Murder! (Rhetorically Speaking)" in order to convey the idea that using rhetoric when making points is incredibly effective. In this way, they provide examples on top of providing examples. One that I noticed was the use of a hypophora, where the writer asks a question to the reader, only to immediately follow up with the answer. For example, Boyd uses this when they say, "Did you notice all of the things that these reports do similarly? Mere coincidence? I think not." They use this to point their reader towards the point that writers can make assumptions while still being objective. Boyd goes on to use euphemisms in their writing. That is to say, they use more pleasant words to convey less pleasant ones. They do this by using the works of their students. "Notice, though, that she doesn’t say that Mark Smith “died” or “croaked” or was “offed”;" Thus, the audience is given many examples of what exac...