Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's The Danger Of A Single Story

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When we only hear a single story about a group of people or an individual from a single perspective, we can make the mistake of accepting that single story as the whole truth and face the danger of a single story. Today, stereotypes are very prevalent. Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie in her ted talk “The Danger of a Single story” speaks about her personal experiences with this problem and the danger of stereotypes creating a single story. Webster’s Dictionary defines stereotype as “a standardized mental picture that is held in common by members of a group and that represents an oversimplified opinion, prejudiced attitude, or uncritical judgment”. Born and raised in Nigeria, Africa, Adichie has been a victim of being labeled as one thing because of …show more content…

Logos is the appeal to logic, logos is important because it appeals to the readers' intellects. Chimamanda speech is well-crafted and is well organized. She starts of talking about her experiences and how that has affected or shaped the woman she is now. Chimamanda uses different smaller stories to illustrate the main message itself. All of them fit logically together, combing her personal experience as a Nigerian in America as well as her Nigerian experience with its own limitations in literature and so on. she states” here is a quote from the writing of a London merchant called John Locke”. She cites well known poets and authors like John Locke, to build on her reasoning and so her audience can see her as knowledgeable and prepared. Chimamanda’s speech has a logical flow. The message is consistent. Every element, example, story, etc relates or contributes to the core message that she is trying to get her audience to …show more content…

Utilizing several rhetorical strategies such as anecdotes, pathos, logos she effectively conveys her core message that defining an experience based on a single account gives us incomplete, potentially damaging understandings of other people. She delivers her speech with smaller stories, the lessons she learned, and even advice to her audience. defining an experience based on a single account gives us incomplete, potentially damaging understandings of other

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