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Visual Rhetorical Analysis

  • Writer: Case Cain
    Case Cain
  • Mar 30, 2017
  • 1 min read

My favorite was the SUPERPOWERS chart. I loved comics as a kid. For me personally, this infograph took me back to the days when I would spend hours reading comics from my Grandpa's massive collection. It looks like a comic, too, and a worn one at that. It has the same fraying and fading of the edges as a few of the Spider-Man books that I wore out by reading countless times! Rhetorically, and being a framed (or frame-able?) poster, it's purpose is probably to just serve as a wall decoration, as it would generally just be popular to those already aware of the information (comic fans). It seems like one of those TJ Maxx finds that you end up bringing home, even though you have more than enough TJ Maxx finds hanging from your walls. Like a ton of those TJ Maxx treasures, nostalgia is the name of the game. This infograph appeals to the kids inside of all of us, with bright colors and information laid out in a way that isn't the most organized, but certainly visually pleasing.


 
 
 

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