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answered: First Paragraph (250 or more) Introduce the article by full

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First Paragraph (250 or more)
Introduce the article by full title and the date it was originally published so that your uninformed readers know which text you are writing about! Introduce the author as a writer: who is she?
Describe your sense of the author’s audience (note: the audience cannot be “everyone” or “all people”—it has to be more specific than that!). To whom is the author speaking, primarily?
Describe the “rhetorical context” or larger, background situation in response to which the author has written the article: what is the situation (or the situations plural) that made the author’s article necessary? What is the “bigger picture” in which the author wrote her article? Summarize for an uninformed audience the author’s overall purpose in the article: what is the author’s purpose, and what is the article “about”? Use at least two direct quotations from the article to support your summary. State your own thesis clearly. One format that works well is to say Analysis paragraph(s) 500 words
“unpack” what Jordan is “saying” about language and EXPLAIN WHY THAT MATTERS using direct quotations as evidence. Use one, two, or three direct quotations from the article to support your analysis in EACH analysis paragraph Conclusion
Write a paragraph in which you remind your readers of the upshot of your analysis of Jordan’s article.

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