Letters from Iwo Jima

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    Michael King Jr. is also known as Martin Luther King Jr. is the ( Maraniza 1 ) author of “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, who is also one of many Civil Rights movement leaders. Furthermore, King and many other protesters were held in jail for initiating a protest in order to “bring attention to the brutal, racist treatment suffered by blacks in one of the most-segregated cities in America-Birmingham, Alabama” ( Maraniza 1). Consequently King was imprisoned for his 13th time, not allowed to…

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    Once upon a time, the idea that a people could self-govern and prosper for years to come was one that many scoffed at. The founding fathers understood the importance of a government "Of the People, by the People and for the People". But sometimes that government is not for all people. It imposes unconstitutional and immoral laws that limit the rights of it's citizens, preventing the growth of the nation as a whole. At these times, civil disobedience is a necessity and the duty of those who…

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    In Martin Luther King’s “Letter From Birmingham”, he is writing to his fellow clergymen. The letter is in response to a newspaper article about his actions of breaking a law while taking part in a nonviolent campaign against segregation as being called “unwise and untimely”. King did not typically write responses, but he did feel that the clergymen deserved an explanation for his actions. King answers the statement made that his actions were untimely and should have waited. He says that blacks…

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    Alexius Sparkman Dr. Ernest Williamson III English Composition II 1 February 2017 Letter from Birmingham Jail Analysis Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere: many minorities would feel this to be true. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote Letter from Birmingham Jail on April 16, 1963 while he was imprisoned for being a participant in a nonviolent protest against segregation. In his letter, Dr. King defends the strategy of nonviolent resistance to violence. In this rhetorical…

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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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    Throughout The Letter from Birmingham Jail written by Martin Luther King Jr, there are multiple uses of rhetorical devices. During the letter King decided to respond to some white clergymen, who felt that his nonviolent protest were “unwise and untimely (paragraph one).” King did not respond to rarely any criticism that he ever received, but he felt this particular letter deserved a response. King knew his response to the letter would have to be calm and peaceful, just as his protest were. He…

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    come together as a harmonious community. When motivated into seeking change, only peaceful resistance can ensure this change by utilizing it in a civil manner. Peaceful protest is done through the acts of love instead of hatred. In his letter, “Letter from a Birmingham Jail,” Martin Luther King Jr. utilizes the biblical phrase "love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you, and pray for them which despitefully use you, and persecute you" in order to acknowledge…

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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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    In short King’s first purpose of his letter is to use rhetorical strategies such as: ethos, logos, and pathos, to refute the letter issued by his fellow clergymen. The second purpose of his letter comes abruptly clear in the third page of his letter when King declares “… last few years I have been gravely disappointed… Lukewarm acceptance is much more bewildering than outright rejection.” (King 3). He uses this page to make the transition from refuting arguments to guiding his fellow clergymen…

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    Racial Inequality: Martin Luther King Jr’s Response Racism in 1963 Martin Luther King Jr.’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, was written to address eight white clergymen who had written statements criticizing King’s nonviolent actions against racial inequality. Through the letter, King expressed his ideas and reasons for his actions. King uses rhetorical appeals, such as ethos, pathos, and logos to persuade readers to agree with his argument of taking on nonviolent actions to deal with racism…

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