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English, 18.10.2020 09:01 tristan4233

Read the following text: Adapted from former US President Jimmy Carter, Foreword to Arctic National
Wildlife Refuge: Seasons of Life and Land, A Photographic Journey by
Subhankar Banerjee. ©2003 by Subhankar Banerjee.

4 Standing on the coastal plain, I was saddened to think of the tragedy that might occur if this great wilderness was consumed by a web of roads and pipelines, drilling rigs and industrial facilities. Such proposed developments would forever destroy the wilderness character of America’s only Arctic Refuge and disturb countless numbers of animals that depend on this northernmost terrestrial ecosystem.

5 The extraordinary wilderness and wildlife values of the Arctic Refuge have long been recognized by both Republican and Democratic presidents. In 1960, President Dwight D. Eisenhower established the original 8.9 million-acre Arctic National Wildlife Range to preserve its unique wildlife, wilderness, and recreational values. Twenty years later, I signed the Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act, monumental legislation that safeguarded more than 100 million acres of national parks, refuges, and forests in Alaska. This law specifically created the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge, doubled the size of the former range, and restricted development in areas that are clearly incompatible with oil exploration.

6 Since I left office, there have been repeated proposals to open the Arctic Refuge coastal plain to oil drilling. Those attempts have failed because of tremendous opposition by the American people, including the Gwich’in Athabascan Indians of Alaska and Canada, indigenous people whose culture has depended on the Porcupine caribou herd for thousands of years. Having visited many aboriginal peoples around the world, I can empathize with the Gwich’ins’ struggle to safeguard one of their precious human rights.

7 We must look beyond the alleged benefits of a short-term economic gain and focus on what is really at stake. At best, the Arctic Refuge might provide 1 to 2 percent of the oil our country consumes each day. We can easily conserve more than that amount by driving more fuel-efficient vehicles. Instead of tearing open the heart of our greatest refuge, we should use our resources more wisely.
What is ONE rhetorical device used in Jimmy Carter's "Foreward to the Arctic National" AND what IMPACT/EFFECT does his use of that rhetorical device have on his audience? Use TEXTUAL EVIDENCE to support your answer.
Feel free to use the following sentence stems to structure your response:

Jimmy Carter effectively uses the rhetorical device in his "Foreward to the Arctic National." His use of can be seen in paragraph ___, when he says, " insert textual evidence here ." Jimmy Carter's use of this rhetorical device impacts the audience by because . This makes Jimmy Carter's foreword effective in because it .
Rubric
Your response is worth 4 points total.

1 Point = Correctly identifying the rhetorical device (1/4 = 25%/100%)
1 Point = Choosing textual evidence that is an example of the identified rhetorical device (2/4 = 50%/100%)
1 Point = Accurately explaining the effect of the author's use of the rhetorical device in the textual evidence (3/4 = 75%/100%)
1 Point = Accurately explaining how the rhetorical device makes the author's argument effective (4/4 100%/100%)

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Read the following text: Adapted from former US President Jimmy Carter, Foreword to Arctic National...
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