Essay three.
This is the analysis essay about the advertisement.
1. You can choose two advertisements about the laundry detergent and write the essay. Following criteria should need to meet which I have attached all the document. (note: you can choose any two advertisements about laundry detergent). You can use mirror and windows effect very carefully.
As you begin to draft your Essay 3, look to page 253 for guidance in the Framework for an Analysis of Two Visuals. There you will see this basic outline for the ad analysis:
• Intro
• Thesis
• Descriptions
• Analysis Body Paragraphs
• Conclusion
Intro: Look at all the elements your intro should have on page 253. One element is "Pose the question your essay will answer." Your question might sound like this: "What are the significant similarities and differences in the ways these two ads appeal to their target audiences through the mirror and window effects of key compositional features?" Your thesis then would answer this sentence in a general way while the body paragraphs answer it in specific, supported, and thoroughly developed ways.
Descriptions: These should be 100 words or so and should describe the ads using concrete details; the point here is to give an overview of the ad while highlighting the key features you will address in your analysis.
Analysis Body Paragraphs: These paragraphs should each begin with a topic sentence that governs the entire paragraph. The topic sentence should present an analytical point about a compositional feature or an idea that you see in both ads, and you should look particularly at the mirror and window effects. The point is to discuss the mirror and window effects of each ad through a similar compositional feature or features. You might write three body paragraphs about one ad and then three body paragraphs about the second--as long as you compare the ads on the same points. Or you might write three body paragraphs in which you discuss both ads at the same time, both ads on each point. One paragraph might discuss the way the ads' characters create mirror and window effects; another paragraph might look at how the settings do it; yet another paragraph might look at the text or key words.