Hillary Clinton Women's Rights Are Human Rights Analysis

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During the late 20th century, the global issue of gender inequality gained a significant amount of recognition because of Hillary Clinton. This is because in 1995, during the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women, Clinton expressed her passion towards ending the abuse of women in her speech “Women’s Rights are Human Rights.” Through the use of pathos and historical allusions as well as a confident posture with calm, direct eye contact and a clear, powerful tone, Clinton successfully enlightened the audience about the issue and persuaded them that changes must be made. She made females everywhere feel united and strong, a strong emotion that would remain with those women and other women after them for a long time. By using pathological …show more content…

For instance, Clinton alludes to the fact that it took one hundred and fifty years after the declaration of independence was signed to have women’s suffrage, all without shedding a drop of blood. This is intended to anger the audience and bring them together so that they can solve inequality issues within a much faster rate. Also, Clinton cleverly states that the fight for women's suffrage was “a bloodless war” to show the audience that all successful resolutions to not have to involve violence, including hers. She also uses the allusions to support one of her claims that a problem that has existed for hundreds of years has only been recognized very recently. This is evident when she asks a rhetorical question about the global issue of domestic violence, “Wasn’t it after all -- after the women’s conference in Nairobi ten years ago that the world focused for the first time on the crisis of domestic violence?” Clinton does this to not only emphasize how neglected women’s inequality issues are but to show the audience that within her lifetime such large and important crises are being focused on even if they started decades ago. Thus being why the argument was so significant then, it opened up women’s and men’s eyes to see the true horrors of society at a global level in the audience, at home, in the car, or wherever they heard

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