Why Women Aren’t Welcome
on the Internet Rhetorical Analysis
Why
Women Aren’t Welcome on the Internet by Amanda Hess was written with the
purpose to inform about the plight of women on the internet and to argue
against the way that society treats the cases. While Hess does make some good
points about the way that society treats women on the internet her argument is
flimsy in many places and relies on pathos to get the audience angry and thus
more easily convince them. The main problem with her argument that women
specifically are being treated in a way they should not is that almost every one
of her examples is of women in positions of power. Not so much power in the
traditional sense, but the power to write and inform. All of her examples of
women being mistreated on the internet are when a woman wrote something
controversial. While she is right that no person should be threatened for stating
their opinion on a matter she is wrong in saying that these women in her
examples are being treated this way because they are women they are being
treated this way more so because with controversy comes adversaries to that
controversy and some are not intelligent enough to handle it in a civilized way.
On the other hand Hess’ voice seems to help her argument. Her voice is one that
is being victimized and through this the reader starts to feel sympathy for
her. She often mentions the situations that she and others had to go through
with law enforcement and does well to make the reader feel as though she had
been treated unfairly even though at some points, when looked at closer, it
feels like she is grasping at straws to help her argument along. There are a
few different audiences in this essay. The main one is women on the internet.
At times the feeling is that she is trying to empower women and make them specifically
feel that they have been mistreated and must force change. The two secondary
audiences are men that threaten on the internet and law enforcement. She makes
a call to law enforcement to do their jobs and protect those that need it. Hess
also is trying to tell men that threaten that they have no place on the
internet and should stop. Overall Hess’ argument is flimsy and does not
convince.
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