Analysis Of The Nine Rings Of JFK

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On the 22nd of November of 1963, the world was forever changed in a short six seconds. On this date, the United States lost one of its most beloved leadership figures. President John Fitzgerald Kennedy was shot and killed by an assassin while riding through downtown Dallas, Texas. This event sent shock waves throughout the nation and people were stunned in disbelief. The 35th President was shot and killed by gunman Lee Harvey Oswald, who was arrested by Dallas police shortly after the assassination. The assassin Oswald was camping out in the Texas School Book Depository building, where he fired three shots from a rifle towards the President’s motorcade. The scene was captured in Dealey Plaza at approximately 12:30pm. His status was elevated …show more content…

Barbarese, Dove, and Ball all used enormously different attitudes to push their arguments forward. In Barbarese’s “The Nine Rings of JFK”, the reader could feel a scandalizing and controversial type of nature from the start. Not many write about or display President Kennedy like how Barbarese chose to do. Whether you would like to debate if he presented the President in a positive or negative light, one must say that the author was pushing for a controversial feeling. Barbarese makes the beloved President come off very smug and almost evil at times. Using writing quotes such as “The President is improvising a new grin. His words leave a smoke trail over the heads of fellow Americans.” (71), Barbarese gives JFK the trait of an immoral and deceptive person that is not the person that is normally thought of when President John F. Kennedy enters one’s mind. Pairing his tone and point of view we can see that the author was pushing the argument of JFK of being a normal man that was not a mythical hero-type figure at all. He greatly differs from the ideas of the average American …show more content…

Forever remembered as the day the United States lost a great leader and man in the passing of John F. Kennedy. As seen through these different writers, some like Barbarese will question the type of the man the martyr was, some like Dove will always remember how deeply saddened they were the news of his death broke out, and some like Ball will analyze how he impacted the country through life and death. Even each author used this topic of JFK’s assassination, all three of them approached the subject with drastically different elements such as the point of view they each wrote from, the voice used in each of their writings, and the overall purpose for their writing. By using three dissimilar styles to three literary elements, each author brought a new argument to the assassination of

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