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    Martin Luther king Jr is a determined right activist who’s willing to do anything for getting the rights that all colored people deserve even if it requires him to write a letter convincing someone in a jail. He writes a letter responding to a criticism said by eight prominent clergymen. He expresses his feelings towards the unjust event. He also shares the current events in Birmingham in 1963 as well as in the rest of America while emphasizing on rhetorical devices ; anaphora and repetition.…

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    A Flight of Activism “Justice will not be served until those who are unaffected are as outraged as those who are”. These were the wise words of the reputable, Benjamin Franklin. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” to address the horrendous issue in not only Birmingham, but the United States as a whole as well. Throughout this letter, King exploits many different rhetorical devices such as imagery, while portraying a multitude rhetorical questions all through this…

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    Analysis on Letter from Birmingham Jail In “Letter from Birmingham Jail” written by Dr. Martin Luther King Jr to his fellow clergymen. King aimed to persuade the clergymen as well as the other readers of his dedication to the civil rights movement and his work. His expert use of pathos, logos, ethos, and other literary devices reflect Kings’ intelligence, and credibility on the matter of segregation, injustice and discrimination. King was and continues to be one of the most quintessential…

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    A Letter from Birmingham jail is often the text we think about during the civil rights movement. Dr.Martin Luther King Jr. does a great job expressing his personal beliefs of what he is fighting for in the civil rights movement. Like many other writers of famous documents, I am pretty sure he did not expect this letter to get the attention it now gets. It reminds me of declarations from the 1600’s and 1700’s where grievances were sent to the King of England. He outlines his beliefs of justice…

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    Delsy Rosario Santos Prof. Leslie Hurley Section E05 The Letter from Birmingham Jail by Martin Luther King Jr. talks about the great injustices happening toward the black community in Birmingham. Martin Luther King Jr uses appeals to emotion in order to justify his desire for racial justice and equality. King Jr states that he's not from Birmingham but he needs to be there because of the big injustices white do toward the black. he feels that by helping the people from Birmingham he…

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    “Letter from Birmingham Jail” is a correspondence from notable civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr. to area members of the clergy who had criticized his manner of advocacy (King 1300). While pointing out he does not make a habit of responding to criticism, King nonetheless indicates he is responding to the pastors because they are level headed and mean well (King 1302). King articulates the purpose for which he is in the Birmingham jail by illustrating ideas of justice and instances of…

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    Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” answers the white clergymen’s criticisms about his nonviolent protests, accusing him of inciting violence in Alabama. In Alabama, with its extreme racial injustice,, both white and some hesitant black Americans prefer allowing more time to resolve racial issues and condemn King for encouraging protest in the community. They label King as an ‘extremist’. He responds to his audience by offering a new perspective on the term ‘extremist’. King…

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    Letter from a Birmingham Jail, by Martin Luther King Jr., is a response to a group of Alabama clergymen, who critique King’s actions in protesting racial segregation and injustice in Birmingham. I Lost My Talk, by Rita Joe, is a poem that uses an extended metaphor to highlight the identity crisis of many Aboriginal people who grew up within the residential school system. Both poems, through the use of the three persuasive appeals, logos, ethos, and pathos, and by addressing their opposition,…

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    A well known, inspirational racial activist, Martin Luther King Jr. is persuasive in his letter entitled “Letter From Birmingham City Jail.” In his letter, he demands that there should be equality for all people. King’s purpose is to persuade the other clergymen to fight for freedom for all the people of color. In his letter, King develops a bitter yet hopeful tone in order to accomplish equality amongst everyone. King effectively achieves his goal of persuading the others through his use of…

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    many rhetorical devices in his works. In his I Have a Dream Speech and his Letter from Birmingham Jail uses rhetorical devices such as repetition, antithesis and rhetorical questions. King uses these to persuade his listeners and readers into granting civil rights to Blacks. In his I Have a Dream speech he is talking to people that have been discriminated against and in his Letter From Birmingham Jail he is addressing white moderates. One rhetorical device Martin Luther King uses in both of…

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