Letter from Birmingham Jail

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    methods: ethos, pathos, logos. In Dr. King’s letter, “Letter from Birmingham Jail” he used all three methods to persuade his fellow clergymen and the white moderate. The three basic foundations of persuasion: ethos, pathos, and logos are also known as credibility, emotion, and logic; however, only one method stood out from the others and goaded Dr. King’s agenda/objective to his audience. The method ethos for credible appeal was used by Dr. King in his letter. Ethos is directed towards those…

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    Luther King was a human rights activist, focused on the equal treatment and rights of blacks in American society. Dr. King wrote an open letter titled, “Letter from Birmingham Jail” while in jail on April of 1963, when segregation was at its greatest in Birmingham, Alabama. The letter was a reply directed to several white, moderate, clergymen who had written an open letter criticizing his actions during the civil rights movement. The increased violence and social injustice caused an unwarranted…

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    While sitting in a Birmingham jail, Martin Luther King Jr wrote to his fellow clergyman. Through this letter, King answered the clergyman's complaints of how the demonstration of nonviolent civil disobedience was unwise and untimely in Birmingham. King defended the actions of the protestors and himself by addressing the concerns of those clergymen. He attempted this task by using scripture, history, and appealing to the intellect of his audience. King disrupted societal norms by nonviolent…

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    to King, M. (2009). Dr. King was incarcerated when he employed creative nonviolence and civil disobedience as he and his followers challenged the structures of racial and economic injustice in Albany, Birmingham. SAILS-DUNBAR, T. T. (2017). A Case Study Analysis of the "Letter from Birmingham Jail": Conceptualizing the Conscience of King through the Lens of Paulo Freire. Pursuit: The Journal of Undergraduate Research at The University of Tennessee, 8(1), 139-148. As told by Brown, T. M., & Fee,…

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    “Letter from Birmingham Jail” is a letter written by Martin Luther King Jr. dated 16 April 1963. After being arrested for protesting in Birmingham, Alabama, eight white clergymen condemned Dr. King and wrote an article disagreeing with his actions in the local newspaper. Dr. King, in return, wrote “Letter from Birmingham Jail” addressing the clergymen and their concerns. “The Perpetuation of Our Political Institutions” is a speech written and delivered by Abraham Lincoln on 27 January 1838.…

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    “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere” (King 113). Martin Luther King Jr. seeks to convince his fellow clergymen in “Letter from Birmingham Jail” that using a nonviolent campaign to end the injustice of segregation is politically, economically, sociologically correct, as well as morally right (117). He does this through a series of appeals. Some of his most effective and inspiring appeals are the logical appeals. He uses logic to convince the clergymen on a moral level that while…

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    Letter from a Birmingham Jail Martin Luther King, Jr. changed the face of equality for the entire nation. His peaceful protests had an effect on the world that violence never could have. His methods were derived from Buddha, as they both believed there was no such thing as a nonviolent fist. It was their belief that there was a way to fight back without having to hurt anyone else. Martin Luther King Jr.’s protests showed not only his love for people of color, but his love for his fellow man. He…

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    In Martin Luther King Jr’s “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” King responds to the criticism written by a group of clergymen about the work that King is pursuing in Birmingham. Although King directly addresses his fellow clergymen he also expresses his strong disappointment in the white churches of the south and the wide range of white moderates. Making it clear that these groups are not in favor of king and the work that he is doing, King explains the flaws of how those who fight against him are…

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    Letter from Birmingham Jail vs. I Have a Dream The great civil rights leader, advocate, and preacher, Martin Luther King, had an extraordinary gift in making simple works such as speeches and letters into beautiful literature. In this essay, two works by King: “Letter from Birmingham Jail” and “I Have a Dream” will be discussed and compared. Although Martin Luther King is the author of both of these analects, and while he demonstrates many of the same skills in both of them, he brings about…

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    against segregation in Birmingham, Alabama. On that same day, eight prominent white Alabama clergymen wrote a statement that was published in the local newspaper in which they portrayed Dr. King as an outside agitator whose actions incite hatred and violence and as a result, urged the African American citizens of Birmingham to withdraw their support for the demonstrations and instead rely on the courts and negotiation the achieve change. Dr. King’s “Letter from Birmingham City Jail” is not…

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