Rhetorical Analysis Of A More Perfect Union

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In 2008, democratic presidential candidate Barack Obama gave a speech, now named “A More Perfect Union”, in response to the controversy over his pastor, Jeremiah Wright, making some very racist remarks against whites and accusing the United States of bringing on the September 11 attacks by spreading terrorism. In his speech, Obama uses many rhetorical strategies including repetition, parallelism, allusion, and metaphors in order to make his statement that, regardless of race, the American people need to work together side by side as one in this time of need to achieve the same goal— achieving a better, more perfect union of America. Near the beginning of his speech, Obama declares, speaking of the U.S.A, that “This nation is more than the sum of its parts.” This is a metaphor meaning that the nation forms a stronger combination of people than you would expect by looking at each individual person. He uses this metaphor to explain that an individual will not be able to make much of a difference towards improving America, but if many people work together they can achieve great things and actually make changes that help solve some of the problems our country faces today. A little later in his speech, Obama uses parallelism to speak of his church, “Trinity embodies the black community in its
He includes so many of these because they bring in more attention from the audience and better articulate exactly what he means. These devises he used in way to make people think and feel and believe and want to change. He uses them to describe the racial divide in America, the issues all Americans face, and how and why he wants to make America a more perfect union. He uses the devices to prove that the only way our union can become more perfect is if people of great differences can acknowledge others problems and work together as

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