The meaning of a persuasive text is not fixed in the text itself — it is shaped by the context in which the text appears and by the identity of the person who produced it. VCAA requires students to analyse how these factors affect an audience’s reception of a persuasive argument.
Context in this sense refers to the circumstances in which a persuasive text is produced and encountered:
Where and how a text appears shapes how it is read before the first word is processed:
- A piece published in one newspaper is received differently from the same piece in a different outlet with a different readership
- Each publication has an established readership with known values, and readers adjust their reception accordingly
- The date of publication matters: a text written during a crisis carries different weight from the same argument made a year earlier
The current state of the public debate around the issue affects how an argument lands:
- A text that argues an unpopular position is received differently depending on whether that position is gaining or losing ground
- A text published in direct response to a recent event carries the emotional weight of that event
- Context of prior arguments: if the author is responding to a specific position, the reader who knows that position reads the rebuttal more richly
The platform shapes audience expectations and reading habits:
- A radio commentary has an audience expecting a particular register and duration
- A newspaper editorial follows conventions that signal ‘this is the institution’s position’
- A social media post operates within character limits and algorithmic attention economies
The identity of the person making an argument affects how it is received — often before a single argument has been made. This is not simply a matter of bias: it reflects the genuine influence of positionality on the meaning and credibility of a claim.
| Identity Factor | Effect on Reception |
|---|---|
| Expertise / credentials | Subject-area experts are granted more credibility on technical claims |
| Personal experience | Someone who has lived through the issue being discussed is often granted moral authority |
| Institutional affiliation | Association with a university, government body, NGO or corporation shapes perceived credibility and bias |
| Cultural background | An author’s cultural position may either lend authenticity or invite suspicion depending on audience values |
| Gender, race, class | These factors affect which audiences trust the author and which resist |
| Political alignment | Known political positions cause some audiences to pre-filter the argument |
A key analytical insight: the same argument can have very different effects depending on who makes it. A claim about Indigenous land rights made by a First Nations leader will be received differently from the same claim made by a non-Indigenous academic — not because the argument is different, but because the audience’s relationship to the speaker’s authority and experience differs.
When a public figure takes a stance on an issue, their persuasive power derives less from the quality of their argument than from their cultural status and the trust and identification their audience has with them. This can work in both directions — a beloved figure can persuade audiences who would never be convinced by the same argument from an unknown author, but can also prompt backlash from audiences who reject the figure.
In your analytical response:
- Name the context specifically: ‘Published in [publication] during [period]…’
- Connect context to effect: How does this context shape the audience’s openness to the argument?
- Identify the author’s relevant identity attributes: Which aspects of who the author is affect credibility?
- Explain the effect on the specific intended audience: Not all audiences respond to identity in the same way
Example:
‘The article’s publication in a suburban community newspaper, rather than a national broadsheet, positions it as a grassroots response to a local issue rather than a top-down perspective. This framing reinforces the author’s claimed identity as a local resident — a positioning that is more likely to generate trust from the text’s intended audience than the same argument presented in an institutional register.’
VCAA FOCUS: Do not assume that author identity determines whether an argument is ‘good’ or ‘bad’ — that is not your analytical task. Your task is to explain how context and identity shape the audience’s reception of the argument. Focus on the relationship between speaker, context and the specific intended audience, not on evaluating the argument’s truth.