The rhetorical devices of anaphora and allusion strongly impacted the overall message of the speech. The anaphora “let freedom ring…” can be noted as to showing that this matter needs to be acted upon to create a more perfect union. In using the allusion “guaranteed the unalienable rights of life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness.” from the declaration of independence, this one phrase put more pressure on the U.S. government of the fact they…
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James Madison and Thomas Jefferson both wrote both important documents for a main purpose – freedom. In the “Declaration of Independence” Jefferson writing is brief, clear, concise and simple in order to not only point readers towards a favorable view of America but preparing them for the rest of the document which tries to convince and justify their independence from Great Britain. This document was divided into three parts – a simple statement of intent, a list of grievances, and a concluding…
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Critical Analysis of the Gettysburg Address Abraham Lincoln was one of our nation’s greatest presidents to date; having delivered more than ten speeches in his time as president. One of his most influential speeches and shortest to date is the Gettysburg Address. He moved a nation with just ten sentences and a total of 272 words that would resonate throughout history. In order to grasp the full meaning of this speech and what type of speech it was we have to remember that the Gettysburg Address was…
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after the civil war had ended. He was reminding audience members how slavery had ended. Another example of King using an allusion is when he mentions the constitution and the Declaration of Independence. He states “ When the architects of our republic wrote the magnificent words of the Constitution and the Declaration of Independence, they were signing a promissory note to which every American was to fall heir.”( Luther 3).Martin Luther King used this allusion to describe our founding fathers promise…
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beating, burning and even imprisonment. This was reality of colonist, women, and slaves during the era of 1700’s and 1800’s. In Thomas Jefferson’s “The Declaration of Independence” he argued that the treatment from king George was insane towards the colonist and that they had a reason to separate from Great Britain, In Elizabeth Cady Stanton’s “Declaration of Sentiment” she advocated for women’s rights, she felt as though men and women were indifferent and deserved to be treated equally, In Fredrick Douglass…
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his letter was so potent and still remains influential and iconic today is because of the sophisticated and subtle rhetorical strategies King used. Specifically, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. used ethos, pathos, and other rhetorical strategies like anaphora, mimesis, and antithesis to argue that people had a responsibility to take action and that then was the time to take action and stop waiting. Dr. Martin Luther King appealed to patriotism as a form of pathos to argue that people needed to take action…
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King used things like chronological order, anaphoras, and allusions to make his speech stronger. He used the chronological order to make the listeners feel more connected because they can relate to what happened. King used anaphora, the repetition of memorable phrases, to help his listeners understand his determination for civil rights for black people. The allusions he used were an easy way to connect to his listeners. Throughout Martin Luther King Jr.’s speech, I have learned that King used allusion, anaphoras, and chro…
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Civil rights activists, Martin Luther King Jr. In his speech,I Have a Dream, published in 1963 addresses the topic of segregation and argues that everyone should freedom and justice. He supports this claim by using ethos, then by using anaphora and finally by using metaphors. MLK's purpose is to persuade his audience into fighting for their rights in order to end segregation. He adopts an urgent and frustrated tone for his audience, the readers of I Have Dream and others interested in the topic of…
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former slave, took the side of anti-slavery throughout his letter, utilizing a historical allusion along with anaphora to facilitate his audience’s understanding of Banneker’s point of view. Banneker capitalizes on his audience’s vulnerability through the use of a historical allusion. The audience of the letter is Thomas Jefferson, one of the creators of the Declaration of Independence, so Banneker refers to a quote in the document saying “that all men are created equal” having “unalienable rights…
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his statement, delivering the speech on the monument of the Abraham Lincoln, the president who abolished slavery. To get the emotions from both sides of all Americans, King uses many rhetorical devices such as allusions, metaphors and similes, and anaphoras. King’s use of allusions affected his audience by making his point of equal rights more powerful. Most of the allusions were focused at white people than it was to the…
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