Rhetorical Situation

This past summer I wanted a new job. I live on the beach, so we have a resort called Fripp Island and I thought it would be perfect to work out there during the summer because I would get to meet a lot of people and have a beautiful view while I was working. To apply for this job, I had to do a couple of things. I had to fill out a job application, summit a resume, and go to an interview. The job application was already printed out, I just had to fill out the blanks, so I had to make sure my hand writing was the best it could be. My resume had to look professional and it had to seem like I knew my stuff. The interview I went to have to be professional but also kind of laid back. The interview was for a job at the beach, so I had to look professional and look beachy at the same time. The purpose of this situation was to get a job and make a good amount of money. The genre this job interview took on was persuasive and information. I had to convince my future manager that I was the perfect person to be a pool attendant. I also have to tell my future manager about myself and all of the past jobs I had. The stance I took on this was professional and excited. I needed to show that I really wanted the job, but not in an overly enthusiastic way. I also needed to be professional about the job, but only to an extent. The job I was interviewing for wasn’t a job someone would have to make a living from, but it was more for college students, so that limited my ways of talking and dressing. My audience was my future manager and a future co-worker.