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Dr. Stacy Cacciatore

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Category: Film Rhetoric

Literature Review – Analyzing food rhetoric in The Sopranos

April 23, 2019April 23, 2019

Assignment: Find out what is already known about your subject and communicate that knowledge concisely in 1,500 words or less. The form of this portion of the project could be an annotated bibliography, a bibliographic or informative essay (i.e., a review of the literature), or some other format conducive to conveying information. Your purpose at…

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Categories: Book Reviews / Film Rhetoric

Dead Ringers Review

April 23, 2019

Dead Ringers Review By Stacy Cacciatore I watched the Cronenberg film, Dead Ringers this week for the first time, in preparation for this class, and I certainly feel that it hits on what Burke is saying about identification. Beverly and Elliot Mantle are identical twins, played by Jeremy Irons. Throughout the film, they act like…

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Categories: Burke / Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio

Night of the Living Dead – Review

April 23, 2019

Night of the Living Dead Review By Stacy Cacciatore In Night of the Living Dead (1968), words are not only unpersuasive, but the lack of communication among the living leads to their demise. As Jancovich (1994) points out in Horror, “the zombies outside are responsible for hardly any of the main characters’ deaths’. Most of…

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Categories: Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio

Get Out – Review

April 23, 2019

Get Out Review By Stacy Cacciatore When analyzing Get Out from a rhetorical hermeneutics perspective, I noticed the objectification of the black male body. For example, in the garden party scene, all of the white people are ogling at his body. One squeezes his bicep while another asks “is it true?” referring to the stereotype that black…

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Categories: Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio

Groundhog Day Review

April 23, 2019

In Groundhog Day, Phil, played by Bill Murry, has the opportunity to perfect his persuasive pitch to convince Rita, played by Andi MacDowell, that they are meant to be together. Burke (1962) states:   A useful ironic device is suggested for a courtier wearing a mask. Let him disguise himself as someone of inferior rank,…

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Categories: Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio

Rhetoric in Do the Right Thing

April 23, 2019

In Do the Right Thing, Spike Lee, the writer, producer, and director, employs several rhetorical strategies to articulate the primary message in the film, which is that we need to ‘do something’ about race relations in America. The film highlights how American society navigates racial, class and economic issues. Spike Lee uses racial stereotypes to highlight…

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Categories: Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio

Sexual Harassment in Forbidden Planet

April 22, 2019

In Simulacra and Simulations, Baudrillard (1994) introduces us to simulacra, which is a copy of something that no longer has an original and simulation, which is the imitation of a real-world process (167).  Baudrillard provides an excellent example of simulation by using Disneyland as an example. He states that Disneyland is a play of illusions…

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Categories: Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio

Review – 2001: A Space Odyssey

April 22, 2019

2001: A Space Odyssey, functions as prophetic rhetoric. It’s pretty amazing to watch this film in the year 2019 and recognize the sheer number of technological predictions that came to fruition that had to have been far-fetched in the year 1968. When this film was made, we had not even gone to the moon yet, however,…

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Categories: Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio

2001: A Space Odyssey – The Eye

April 22, 2019April 22, 2019

I thought I was being particularly insightful when I told my husband a quarter of the way through 2001: A Space Odyssey that I noticed Kubrick seemed to be focusing on the eyes. However, it quickly became clear about mid-way through the movie that the focus on the eyes wasn’t a ‘hidden’ message, yet an…

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Categories: Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio

Boyhood in Mr. Smith Goes to Washington

April 22, 2019

In Mr. Smith Goes to Washington, we meet Jefferson Smith a naïve scout leader who is brought into a position of Senator because it is believed he will follow orders. Throughout this movie, I noticed was that Smith seemed to act more like a boy than a man. One component that wasn’t clear to me…

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Categories: Film Rhetoric / Ph.D Digital Portfolio
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