Letter From Birmingham City Jail Analysis

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In the 1960s there were three very influential men fighting for the rights of many. Martin Luther King Jr., Malcolm X, and John F. Kennedy were men fighting for the rights of the African Americans. Dr. King wrote many speeches but the ones that stick out to everyone are “I Have a Dream” and his “Letter from Birmingham City Jail”. In a world where you are judge by the color of your skin but not by what kind of person you are you have to work for your freedom, and that is what the African American people did to get their rights. I think it was the most inhuman thing in the world at that time segregating people based on their skin. With Dr. King and his way of fighting for the people without violence but with his speeches and letters was the …show more content…

They were here when the Declaration of Independence was founded. In this speech he uses a lot of emotional appeal and parallelism. When he starts to say, “I have a Dream” that was parallelism and it had a lot of emotional appeal as well. Saying the words “I have a Dream” in every paragraph you can see the parallelism. Then in those paragraphs some of the stories are sad and get to your heart, like “I have a dream that one day down in Alabama, with its vicious racists…” since we know what was going on back then all the hate and murders that were getting free of. Also with his speech the use of parallelism makes the points become very distinct and make them stand out. The words “go back”, “we can never”, “let freedom ring”, and many other examples are used to enforce his ideas. Then there is his “Letter from Birmingham City Jail” which uses a lot of logical and ethical appeals, but also has a lot of parallelism. In this letter he uses logical appeal when stating “You may well ask, “Why direct action? Why sit-ins, marches, etc.? Isn’t negotiation a better path?” You are exactly right in your call for negotiation. Indeed, this is the purpose of direct

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