Rhetorical Analysis Of Dr. Marc Lamont Hill's Speech

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Dr. Marc Lamont Hill is a CNN Political Contributor and speaker. Dr. Lamont Hill’s speech, which took place in the Sheldon Ballroom at SUNY Oswego, was part of “I am Oz, Diversity Speaker Series Events”, a program to help inform college students about social justice and racial unrest within our nation and around the world. The majority of students who attended this event was made up of African-Americans, with less than ten white students. There were also a few professors and residential life advisors there, who were also mostly African-American. This was due in part by the matter of the speech, which did not include a title, but was focused on the black lives in America. This event started with opening remarks from Kimberly Chung and Imani …show more content…

Marc Lamont Hill stated that he was not here to preach or to educate us, or even to inform us; His main goal of that night was to unsettle us. He had three main talking points in the speech, all of which were actions he wanted each of us to achieve. These three actions were to listen, to remember, and to act bravely. He wants us all to listen to each other, and by doing so, committing ourselves to moral practices. Dr. Hill had the entire audience stand up and sing the Black National Anthem, “Lift Every Voice”. This engagement made the audience fell what blacks had to endure in the hardest times. He said, “America; listen to yourself and your promise”. This, referencing to the promise of life, liberty, and the pursuit of …show more content…

Marc Lamont Hill’s second point was to remember. This is where Dr. Hill softened his voice to show condolences on lives we have lost in the struggle of equality. America seems to have only focused on the good that came from the racial movement, but leave out and forget the broken shards or reality. Dr. Martin Luther King Junior was seen as a savior, a voice, a symbol to blacks around the world, but what isn’t talked about is the constant threats he received, the thousands of other people who walked with him in the million-man march, the reality that nothing was changing like they had hoped. Dr. Hill wants us to go deeper into history so that we do not make the same mistakes as we have in the past. The third point in this speech was about acting bravely. The first word, act, is hard enough to do alone, but to do it in a brave manner seems impossible to us. Dr. Hill raised his voice in a passionate tone, crying out for others to act bravely like he has. “To act bravely”, he said, “is to ask a different question than what has been asked. We mustn’t let them tell you the question, we must find that questions ourselves.” The best way to find the right question is to join organizations and tell the truth. It is best to tell the truth when it is hard, not when it rolls off the

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