Sojourner Truth's Ain T I A Woman

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Women’s rights activist and abolitionist, Sojourner Truth in her speech, “ Ain’t I a Woman”, argues that she is a woman and she has the rights of any man, because she can do what any man can do, so why isn’t she treated like a man? She supports her claim by first using personal narrative by giving her perspective of what she has experienced in the form of discrimination against both blacks and women, then she uses diction that may not have been the most sophisticated but was effective in producing thoughts and emotions among the audience, next she goes on to use a repetitive Syntax that helps emphasize her thoughts, lastly she ends on a note of confidence and she thanks her audience for listening. Sojourner's purpose is to persuade in order to convince the many people that are attending her speech …show more content…

She uses a fact which cannot be disproven. This helps secure what she is trying to say. She says that their would be no man without a woman to have that man. What gender bears all of the children? She hits the man she talked to with a hard fact to argue with. She argues, how can he say that women aren't worthy because Christ wasn’t a “woman”, when Christ came from a woman and God? Her attitude in this paragraph is accusing because of the unlawfulness of the discrimination against women. She uses repetition in her Syntax to get her point across and emphasize the importance of a woman. The purpose of Sojourner Truth’s speech is to argue that she is a woman and she can do as much as a man, so why does she not have the same rights as a man? It is unfair and she wants to make it a point to call for change. She addresses how together, they can change women’s rights, as well as the black person's rights. The overall tone of the passage was very accusatory and she shows this by the use of exclamation marks and by her sentence structure, along with her word

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