English 1006T
An exercise
29 November 2011

Attending to expectations and assumptions

I've scanned in five of the original paragraphs people offered as examples of texts that are "just describing or explaining." I've left out a couple where the text was pretty clearly making a very clear argument (not that you can't do this same thing with that sort of text; it's just that the assumptions are a lot harder to see when the text is argumentative). I've highlighted some words I want to attend to, and I want to begin by asking you to attend to them. I've put the words I'd like to think about in boldface type.

Read through them, paying special attention to the boldfaced phrases. Pick any eight, write each out (just the boldfaced part), and then say what you think the effect of the phrase is on a reader, and if you can propose an alternative that would mean the same thing, but have a different effect (this second may not always be possible; for instance, sometimes simply leaving the phrase out wouldn't affect the meaning of the passage at all, but would change its effect).

Here's an example:

former Governor General of Canada -- this not only helps us think this is an important, respectable deal, it also assumes we accept that "Governor General" is a really important office, and what's done in its name must be worth considering.
Take a half hour or so for this, and get me your page of explanations as soon as possible.


The Trumpet of Conscience features five lectures that Martin Luther King, Jr., delivered in November and December 1967 for the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) Massey Lectures. Founded in 1961 to honor Vincent Massey, former Governor General of Canada, the annual Massey Lectures served as a venue for earlier speakers such as John Kenneth Galbraith and Paul Goodman.


The trauma associated with 9/11 affected and continues to influence children, families, and other groups of people. While research is cataloguing the various coping difficulties experienced, few studies specifically address issues related to parenting perceptions and related activities or behaviours. We examined individuals employed in close proximity to Ground Zero and considered these individuals' perspectives regarding their parenting perceptions and behaviours.


It might be argued that American civil religion became something of a joke in the era of political cynicism associated with Vietnam and Watergate (although it was revived very briefly during the Bicentennial). It certainly has not been a conspicuous element in the national consciousness during the subsequent decades of increasingly bitter interest-group politics. Social scientists, heir to the positivist traditions of Comte and Marx, accepted as a given the trend of modern societies toward "secularization," and hence have grown increasingly impatient with the notion that religion--even a "civil" one--has any place in a modern polity (Wilson 1998).


On February 28, 1993, the United States Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms (BATF) launched the largest assault in its history against a small religious community in central Texas. Approximately eighty armed agents invaded the compound, purportedly to execute a single search and arrest warrant. The raid went badly; six Branch Davidians and four agents were killed, and after a fifty-one-day standoff the United States Justice Department approved a plan to use CS gas against those barricaded inside. Tanks carrying the CS gas entered the compound. Later that day, fire broke out, and all seventy-four men, women and children inside perished.


Laziness and cowardice are the reasons why so great a proportion of men, long after nature has released them from alien guidance (natura-liter maiorennes), nonetheless gladly remain in lifelong immaturity, and why it is so easy for others to establish themselves as their guardians. It is so easy to be immature. If I have a book to serve as my understanding, a pastor to serve as my conscience, a physician to determine my diet for me, and so on, I need not exert myself at all. I need not think, if only I can pay: others will readily undertake the irksome work for me. The guardians who have so benevolently taken over the supervision of men have carefully seen to it that the far greatest part of them (including the entire fair sex) regard taking the step to maturity as very dangerous, not to mention difficult. Having first made their domestic livestock dumb, and having carefully made sure that these docile creatures will not take a single step without the go-cart to which they are harnessed, these guardians then show them the danger that threatens them, should they attempt to walk alone. Now this danger is not actually so great, for after falling a few times they would in the end certainly learn to walk; but an example of this kind makes men timid and usually frightens them out of all further attempts.


"very serious about the effect. Anguish would be an alternate." "without the word people wouldn't know what a big deal 9/11 was."


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