Carol Anne
Grayson discusses the Malala case in order to show the readers another side of
the story with different perspectives and gives her point of view on it. She
uses several tools to express her ideas in a subjective and objective way to
state facts, not only opinions.
First of all,
we can distinguish the emotional attitude towards the subject through the whole
text. For example, when she claims that “all this state management behind the
scenes strikes me as far as removed from the image portrayed on our screens of
a simple very bright girl, with a love for school standing up for her rights”
(Grayson, 2013), she reveals disappointment and frustration even though she has
full respect for Malala and the injustice she stood up against.
Second of
all, on the social level, Grayson states “there is only special treatment for
some of those affected. Why not fly out every child harmed by US drones to the
West for the most up to date medical care, there are plenty for well-wishers to
assist.” In fact, she is implying that Malala has been treated very kindly and
has received great assistance and privileges from the UK over most of the
injured children who had the same conditions or even worse. Also, she is,
somehow criticizing the British government for using Malala’s case for
exploitation and branding. Furthermore, Carol Anne Grayson insists on the fact
that Malala achieved her goals and overcame her trauma very easily with all the
facilities handed to her whilst “Malala should not be used as a diversion to
distract away from other women that have been fighting in British courts for
years to highlight injustice and the wrongdoing of the government” (2013).
She also gives
her opinion in a logical way, proving to the readers that she writes in an
objective and realistic way. In fact, she points out that many young people
have escaped from tough situations such as war or any kind of violence and
opened up to the world to talk about their experience by defending human rights
and many causes. However, only Malala obtained privileges and was heard by
everyone. Thus, she asks herself “I have met many juvenile survivors of
torture, outspoken activists on human rights so what makes one person more
deserving than another?” (Grayson, 2013)
Equally
important, the rhetorical perspective in Grayson’s text illustrates her
arguments. As a matter of fact, the author utilizes a lot of questions that
cannot be answered actually, to emphasize the obvious problems in our society.
For example, she claims the following: “How many men do you see studying gender
to work with women for greater equality though it would benefit society for
more males to do so.” – “I wonder, how many people can name the others girls
injured when Malala was shot? What quality of care and support did they
receive?”. The text is also argumentative, since the author reveals her opinion
followed by quotes from other resources and detailed examples. Moreover, Carol
Anne Grayson writes in a very formal way employing a developed vocabulary but
easy to understand in order to address and attract all kinds of audiences, from
teenagers to adults.
Finally, the
ethical aspect is manifested through the text as the author defends our natural
rights as well as morals and values by proving her disagreement towards the
over-importance and interest given to Malala’s accomplishment: “Malala has been
surrounded by care, offered opportunities and her story given immense media
coverage. That does not happen for most women. Many go unheard no matter how
vocal they may be or what risks they take, they simply don’t fit in to a
popular narrative, especially if victims of the state”. Therefore, she reveals
inequality and injustice that affects our world nowadays and criticizes how the
Malala case affected our society in the way it wasn’t supposed to. In fact,
Grayson declares that “As an intelligent young role model, I don’t imagine
Malala would want this. I would think all she wants to do is knuckle down and
get on with her education and hopefully will be allowed to do so in peace”.
In conclusion, we can find five different perspectives in
the text which the author adopts to send her message: as the emotional
emphasizes the personal impact that the idea has on her, the social view shows
how it affects our society, the logical perspective points out the reasoning
behind her arguments, the rhetorical aspect to reveal the tools used to explain
her point of view and the ethical approach specifies how the text influences
the values or rights of our world.
Work cited:
“”brand Malala”:Western Exploitation of a school girl.” (Carol
Anne Grayson, 2013) Shifting Narratives: A Reader for Academic Writing.
social: good but justify (good intext citation but bad work cited)
ReplyDeleteemotional: say more about her feelings, sarcasm for instance
rhetorical: good but justify and cite
logical: you dont show what her conclusions are, this section is very broad, what does she say about BROWN about the UK
ethical: more about the moral good and so on...