Rhetorical Analysis Of Letter From Birmingham Jail Essay

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    Below please type a rhetorical precis identifying two rhetorical choices. These choices can be rhetorical appeals (ethos, pathos, logos) or you can use stylistic choices such as repetition, connotation, metaphor, etc. Type your information in black. Cite the text with King Jr. in your parentheses. Be sure in your “analysis of quote” to explain how that example of the rhetorical choice supports the purpose identified in the precis. Name: Nhi Vo (4 points) Precis: Martin Luther King, a…

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    Martin Luther King Jr’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” responds to the eight clergymen’s letter condemning his nonviolent demonstrations, labeling him as an extremist. King’s usage of allusions, antithesis, and analogy to build his credibility and appeal to the emotions of his moderate audience justify his extremist actions and persuades the reader to act against injustices. King addresses the clergymen’s accusation of King’s “extreme measures” by creating analogies to justify his actions. He…

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    Luther King Jr. uses 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…

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    have a dream uses powerful rhetorical devices. One main device he uses is parallelism in his speech. anaphora, alliteration. and pathos was used in order to empower his speech, for him to be able to get his point across to the people. Within his argument, he was aiming to touch the heard of people's hearts. First off parallelism is shown throughout the speech as he repeats his ideas. By using "Let freedom ring from the snow capped Rockies of Colorado; Let freedom ring from the curvaceous peaks…

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    In the ¨Letter from Birmingham Jail¨, Martin Luther King Jr. uses ethical appeals in order to convince the Clergymen of his authority. King uses ethical appeals to influence his audience by making appropriate allusions. This is shown when King says, " I am in Birmingham because injustice is here...and just as the Apostle Paul left his village of Tarsus and carried the gospel of Jesus to the far corners of the Greco- Roman world." King is comparing himself to the Apostle Paul, saying that he is…

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    against segregation, Martin Luther King was put in the Birmingham City Jail where he received a letter from the clergymen criticizing his work. He responded with another letter where he fully explained the reasons behind the protests. In this letter Martin Luther King remained a gentleman when addressing the clergymen. This is seen in his use of professional language and through the examples that were use to support his ideas. Throughout the letter his selective language helped him get his point…

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    rights of the individual paves the way for the destruction of all rights without exception; this is the way to chaos.” The idea of communal chaos when an individual experiences the injustice of their positive rights is echoed in King’s Letter from A Birmingham Jail. King writes, “injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny.” The community is either moved toward a state of mutual justice or the…

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    and his actions that he was able to come across as a very calm person and one that had a goal, to preach the word of the Lord and to free blacks from segregation. Luther inspired people to get behind his cause by going to lengths no one else would. Protesting to the point of being thrown in jail, and still whilst being held in captivity writing letters to say…

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    In Martin Luther King Jr.’s, “Letter from a Birmingham Jail” and in Thoreau’s letter, “Civil Disobedience”, it can be seen that both essays are similar in many ways such as writing styles, strategies, audiences, and purposes. Dr. MLKJ writes to inform his audience on the discrimination on people of color and Thoreau writes to inform his audience on the injustice of unfair and unequal taxes. They both write their essays in a formal letter form to show that their pieces are casual but still…

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    Introduction Martin Luther King Jr. had many talents, one of his strongest was his ability to convey his message via the written word or oration. In King’s letter from Birmingham jail, he utilized several persuasive methods to gain the reader’s buy-in. Some of the more obvious techniques were two-sided messaging and “ethos (credibility), logos (reason), and pathos (emotion)” (Higgins 2012) to leverage a mutual understanding by the involved parties (p 195). “King’s greatest political pluralism…

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