Perspectives on Argument, 10th edition
Published by Pearson (April 9, 2024) © 2025
- Nancy V. Wood University of Texas at Arlington
- James S. Miller Univeristy of Wisconsin--Whitewater
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For first- or second-year courses in English, argument or argument literature.
Skills for purposeful argument, acknowledging multiple perspectives
Perspectives on Argument teaches critical reading, critical writing and research strategies for skillful participation in argument in all its forms. Clear instruction combines with readings on today's most controversial issues, offering multiple perspectives. Exercises help students analyze text and images and write persuasive responses for effective discourse at home, school, work and online.
The 10th Edition includes new readings and integrates a civic approach to argument that offers meaningful practice in the art of overcoming division and polarization.
Hallmark features of this title
- Prepares students for written, digital and multimodal argument with instruction, writing exercises, audience analysis, and exemplary readings, such as MLK Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail.”
- Teaches reading, critical thinking and writing as tandem processes and helps students apply related analysis and argument strategies with summary charts.
- Readings invite multiple perspectives on controversial issues and engage students in finding common ground.
- Students learn and apply strategies throughout for idea development, research, note-taking, source evaluation and more.
- Chapters can be used in any sequence to offer instruction, writing assignments and class projects on key forms of argument (e.g., online, exploratory, Rogerian, analysis and researched position papers).
New and updated features of this title
- UPDATED: The Arguing Like a Citizen feature more deeply emphasizes how a civic approach to argument can overcome division and polarization.
- NEW: Readings and visuals on the most current, controversial issues in public life today help students develop fresh critical and analytical understanding and apply argument strategies.
- NEW: The Reader has been revised and streamlined to focus on the key issues currently impacting society. Sets of readings explore pressing and topical issues, with new selections offering multiple perspectives on transgenderism, embracing blackness, AI in academics, police reform, Islamophobia and more.
- NEW: Questions and assignments include new prompts on current issues, as well as activities that ask students to write in greater depth about digital argument and the relationship between argument and citizenship.
- UPDATED: The research section reflects 2021 MLA and APA guidelines on documenting researched argument papers, using electronic sources and more.
- 1. A Perspective on Argument
- 2. The Rhetorical Situation: Understanding Audience and Context
- 3. Reading, Thinking, and Writing About Issues
- 4. The Essential Parts of an Argument: The Toulmin Model
- 5. Types of Claims
- 6. Types of Proof
- 7. The Fallacies and Ethical Argument
- 8. Multimodal Argument
- 9. Rogerian Argument and Common Ground
- 10. Review and Synthesis of Argument Strategies
- 11. The Research Paper: Planning, Research, and Invention
- 12A. The Research Paper: Using Sources, Writing, and Revising
- 12B. How to Document Sources Using MLA and APA Style
- 13. Summary Charts: Synthesis of Chapters 1-12
- The Reader
About our authors
Nancy V. Wood, Professor Emerita of English at the University of Texas at Arlington, taught courses in rhetoric and composition, American literature, and Milton and also served as Director of First Year English, Department Chair, and Assistant Vice President of Undergraduate Academic and Student Affairs. She created the training program for the graduate teaching assistants who teach the freshman argument classes at the university. Perspectives on Argument, developed in the context of this program, underwent constant classroom testing of both content and classroom activities. Other argument textbooks of the time tended to present issues as having only two sides, pro and con, with the possibility of one side “winning.” Perspectives on Argument took a different approach by suggesting that issues may invite a variety of perspectives and that common ground and eventual consensus are also possible outcomes.
Much of Wood's academic career focused on what freshman students need to become successful college students. While a graduate student in English at Cornell University, Wood taught study skills to Cornell students. Later at the University of Texas at El Paso she created the Study Skills and Tutorial Services, a university-wide program that provided academic support to 12,000 students a year.
Wood is also the author of Essentials of Argument, Writing Argumentative Essays, and College Reading: Purposes and Strategies (Prentice/Pearson).
James Miller is a professor of English at the University of Wisconsin-Whitewater where he teaches courses in 20th century American literature, digital rhetoric, and composition. His scholarship focuses on issues of public memory and the formation of middle-class identity in twentieth-century America, as well as the role commodity culture plays in shaping historical consciousness. His published work has appeared in such journals as American Studies, The Journal of American Folklore, and The Public Historian. In addition to Perspectives on Argument, Professor Miller is the author of several other rhetorical studies and argument readers, among them, The Eater Reader (Pearson).
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