Public Speaking

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1

Select Your Persuasive Topic (^235)


Select Your Persuasive Topic


Choosing a persuasive topic can be challenging. It should be disputable, significant
to others, and important to you because it’s arguably more ethical to influence others
toward a viewpoint or action that you personally believe, care about, and actually
practice. So begin your topic search by asking yourself several questions.^4
• What do I believe strongly? What do I accept as true that my audience might dispute?
What issues and ideas do I think are false?
• What arouses my emotions? What angers me? What are my pet peeves? What arouses
my pity? When am I happiest? What do I fear?
• What social ideals do I support? What changes would I like to see in society? What
current problems or conditions could improve if we were convinced there is a

Read, highlight, and take
notes online.

Diversity
in praCtiCe

persuasion in China


As China rapidly becomes a global superpower,
interactions between China and the West high-
light some fundamental assumptions about
influence and persuasion. Li Liu,^2 a professor
at Beijing Normal University, summarizes the
Western model of persuasion as a combination
of ethos, pathos, and logos by which persuaders
hope to sway others. In contrast, Chinese per-
suasion follows a more collectivist model that
is dialogical and interdependent—reflecting
Confucian ideals of harmonious relationships
that balance yang (power, light, masculinity)
and yin (passivity, darkness, femininity).
In China, a person’s sense of self is embed-
ded in family and social relationships; consequently, persuasion is grounded in
these associations. Within the family, influence is based in filial piety (respect
for parents) and in maintaining family harmony. Outside the family, influence is
grounded in guanxi, or relationships that operate on reciprocity; obligations that
emerge from these relationships become tools of influence.
How do cultural differences work out in practice? Researchers explain that
messages are more persuasive when they are tailored to embedded cultural frames,
when they include culturally relevant themes, and when the recipients are aware
of cultural distinctions. For example, European Americans were more likely to
believe that caffeine posed risks and they should alter their behaviors when the
message was framed as hurting them personally. However, Asian Americans were
more persuaded by messages that focused on their relational obligations.^3
On weblink 17.1, watch the video in which two Chinese people explain the
concept of guanxi. Then talk with a few classmates about how guanxi might affect
an American who is doing business in China.

Chinese art symbolizing yin-yang
(Tai Chi).

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