Your Opinion Matters Too!
For this blog, I want to offer a brief (lol) crash course on what is Objectivity, Subjectivity, Rhetorical Situations, and Op/Eds!
Objectivity and Subjectivity. These
are two ways to approach an argument, and both have their uses. Objective
writing is primarily fact-based writing, free of any personal feelings or
biases. It takes both observable and measurable facts into account when basing
an argument or reporting a theory. It
would be commonplace to find objectivity in genres like in a textbook or during
a news report. Subjective writing is based on personal opinions,
interpretations, and judgments, putting the author’s emotions into words. The
word “I” is a key descriptor of subjectivity. You can find subjectivity most
notably in biographies, the comments section of a website, and yes, even blogs.
As a writer who has always been
required to stay objective when working on research papers and persuasive
essays in high school and my early college years, transitioning from
objectivity to subjectivity is going to feel truly liberating. Along with
providing a wealth of knowledge to support my arguments, being free to also
voice my own opinions in the discussion feels like I’m involved, and not just a
robot reporting data. It’s a great opportunity to break from that old mold of
writing.
Blogs are a great way of responding
to rhetorical situations. According to professor Richard Nordquist, "a rhetorical situation is the context of a rhetorical act, made up of a rhetor, an issue, a medium, and an audience." Depending on the genre of blog – a company blog, a
technical blog, a news blog, a personal blog – a writer can choose to implement
objectivity, subjectivity, or a mix of both. What matters is how a blogger
would like to share the information they post to the type of audience viewing
their particular blog. Do you want your viewers to rely on your blog as a
source of knowledge? Do you want them to sympathize or feel inspired? You
decide.
Recently I’ve been reading a few of
the rhetorical situations discussed in the op/eds of the Washington Post, the
New York Times, and the LA Times. One that drew my interest in particular was
the discussion of smartphones, videogames, and computers being responsible for teenage anxiety, but was soon deemed a myth. The reason it caught my eye first
glance was that it was relatable to me. As a teenager and even today, computers
are my life. It is my source of information and entertainment. Upon hearing it
may have been the cause for my introverted adolescence, I was already listing
ideas in my head to defend the technology I hold dear. Glad it was debunked.
And then it had me thinking. If I were to become involved in op/eds, these are
the rhetorical situations I can respond to and discuss. They are what I’m passionate
about.
Op/Eds are opinion pieces that
discuss current rhetorical situations of today. If you see a major event or
controversy discussed on the news last night, you can be sure there are already
op/eds being written about them today. The authors of these op/eds write these
columns with an purpose, not simply to rant. They voice their opinions strongly and
provide a wealth of research and knowledge to propose to their audience a call
to action; to see things from a different perspective.
Op/Eds are different than news
reports and textbooks that merely inform the reader in a solely objective
fashion. Each one is unique because of the subjective language evoked from the
author. This subjective language is what captures a specific audience’s
attention. The author takes a side from the get-go to a rhetorical situation
and defends that side with enthusiasm, winning over an audience with similar
viewpoints, and making enemies with others who think differently.