Rhetorical Elements in Martin Luther King Jr.'s 'Letter From Birmingham City Jail'

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On April 16th, 1963, Martin Luther King Junior, Baptist pastor and civil rights activist, in his letter entitled “Letter from Birmingham City Jail,” supports the civil rights movement and social justice. He supports this claim by first telling the people that they will attain freedom because it is their God given will, then by praising the ones who were standing up for their freedom, and finally giving the American people hope about the future. Through King’s use of tone, rhetorical appeals, and rhetorical tools he effectively persuades the entire U.S. population to justify their means of protest in order to bring attention to social justice, and to fight for their freedom. King’s optimistic, hopeful and critical tone informs and reaffirms the nation. Martin Luther King Jr. uses his diction in his letter to reaffirm and give hope to the nation that they will gain their freedom. He has hope that they will be free and has no doubt that they will gain freedom: “I have no fear about the outcome…we will reach the goal of freedom” (1). King states that even though they are suffering he knows it is their destiny to be free just as America: “Abused and scorned though we may be, our destiny is tied up with the destiny of America” (1). Martin Luther King’s use of words and his tone give the American people a sense of hope and show King is very optimistic that they will for sure gain freedom. Another element of King’s tone is his imagery and this helps portray his purpose. He expresses his dread in being in jail by giving the audience a picture of it: “What else is there to do
He succeeded in this purpose by effectively using optimistic tone, ethos and pathos, and rhetorical questions and repetition. King’s letter truly shaped our history by pushing America to fight for freedom and making it

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