How It Feels To Be Colored Me By Zora Hursa Rhetorical Analysis

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Pursuit of equality When write an essay or make a speech, the way a writer use to deliver his message is especially important. A good writer or lecturer is fully aware whom he will be delivering his message to, and what kind of rhetorical strategies he will be using to convince his audience. The purpose of this essay is to analyze the rhetorical strategy of two articles, “Ain’t I a Woman” by Sojourner Truth and “ How it Feels to Be Colored Me” by Zora Hurston. Both Sojourner and Zora speaks about the inequalities that women and blacks faced at that time in America, and their goals is to make their readers--usually the vulnerable groups in society, to pursue their rights of equality and identity. However, the rhetorical strategies …show more content…

In “Ain’t I a Woman”, Sojourner uses repetition, pathos and addressing opposing viewpoint to make her argument more persuasive, while in “ How it Feels to Be Colored Me”, Hurston changes her tones of writing and use metaphor to convince her audience. In article “Ain’t I a Woman”, Sojourner …show more content…

She begins talking about her childhood experience in a Negro town, where she has no idea her difference between other white people. “During this period, white people differed from colored to me only in that they rode through town and never lived there.”(417). Then she immediately realize the difference at age of thirteen. However unlike most other black people, she didn’t talk much about how unequally she was treated or her anger towards discrimination. Instead, she said” But I am not tragically colored” and “ I do not mind at all”(417). By saying so, Zora wants her reader to know that she was not feeling the hatred toward her own self of who she was and what colored skin she had, she showed who she was and as she mentioned” I do not mind at

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