Abigail Adams was the wife of John Adams who played an important part in the American Revolution and went on to become the second President of the United States. In this letter, Abigail Adams is addressing her son, John Quincy Adams, as he travels with his father on an embassy to France. John Quincy would later become the President of the United States and played a key role in the forming of America. Throughout this letter, Abigail Adams establishes appealing to pathos and illustrating key ideas through the use of maternal tones, familial duties, patriotic appeals, and allusions to historical figures and nature to promote applying one’s natural talent and gaining wisdom from experience. Adam integrates appealing to pathos through maternal overtures and promoting nationalism to construct an argument for her son to apply himself on his travels and throughout his future life.…
In Mary Ann Shadd Cary’s editorial for the Provincial Freeman, she writes many reasons for why there should be an African American newspaper. Mary Ann Shadd Cary is an African American abolitionist and writer for the fugitive community. Mary Ann Shadd Cary appeals to the audiences’ sense of logos when she says “...due to our Constitution and Government, that we should train ourselves so as to fit us for the discharge duties of freemen…”. Mary Ann Shadd Cary is saying that since she is a free woman it is her given right from the Constitution to produce the Provincial Freeman.…
How would you feel if you were to work eight hours and over while other people are sleeping? Do you approve or disapprove of child labor? Florence Kelley was a United States social worker and reformer who fought successfully for child labor laws and improved conditions for working women. She uses rhetorical strategies or devices to express her message about child labor to her audience. The rhetorical strategies or devices she used were: inclusive language, emotional language, and sarcasm.…
Florence Kelley conveys her opinion about child labor by using mutiple rhetorical strategies. She uses appeal to emotions, repeation, and sarcasm to to emphasize how terrible child labor is. Kelley uses appeal to emotions to make the readers have sympathy toward these children.…
She knows how to puts a sentence together that will make you think about what you read on a moral level (Marcotte n. pag.). She knows when to appeal to certain emotions throughout her article to build off of those feelings. Comparing this to Babich’s article where he doesn’t use emotions as well as Marcotte. His emotional appeals weren’t as well constructed as Marcotte’s. The strongest element for Babich was his analyzation.…
Smith’s Urgent Declaration Throughout the 1950’s, a Red Scare movement caused mass panic among Americans, led by the Senate accusing innocent citizens of supporting communism, which ruined the careers and lives of many. The Republican minority attacked the Democratic administration during this movement, criticizing the government for its lack of strong leadership. In her “Declaration of Conscience,” Margaret Chase Smith pressures the current administration to improve its leadership through the use of emotional appeals, anaphora, and ethos. Firstly, Smith employs emotional appeals in order to motivate the American people to urge the Democratic leaders to change.…
As stated by Silva Rhetoricae, +“Rhetoric is the study of effective speaking and writing (discourse), and the art of persuasion and many other things”. There are many types of rhetorical devices such as: pathos, logos, ethos, hyperbole, simile, repetition, and et cetera. Rhetoric is used to persuade, to motivate, and to call things to action. The Address to Congress on Women’s Suffrage (text one) uses several rhetorical devices compared to “Chapter 14” from The Jungle (text two). The passage, What is Rhetoric?…
Brimmer 1 Paige Brimmer Mrs. King AP English 22 August 2015 United States social worker and reformer, Florence Kelley, in her speech at the National American Woman Suffrage Association in Philadelphia on July 22nd, 1905, illuminates her views on women and children’s rights. Kelly’s purpose is to enlighten the audience of the lack of rights present for these members of society. Kelly intentionally uses syntax, diction, and imagery to motivate the audience to alleviate these citizens. Kelly effectively uses syntax to establish a sense of trust between the audience and herself.…
In Maria W. Stewart's lecture in Boston in 1832, she conveys her position on the injustices of slavery and the cruelty that slaves experiences through the use of diction, figurative language, and her own personal experience. Altogether, these create a sense of injustice and desparity for the cause of the African Americans and their freedoms and aspirations to be something more than just servile labor. Diction is a major influence in this lecture. With a variety of words, such as "chains", "ragged", "drudgery and toil", "exhausted", "death", and "cruel", Stewart appeals to the feelings of people in an attempt to make them understand the hardships and extreme injustice that encompass the life of a slave. To continue, there is also another set…
He was a respected man, known for his slow thorough thinking. This speech was a challenge to the existing judicial philosophy, particularly as it applied to women. He suggested that perhaps the court and government are involved in matters they should not be involved in. this voice of reason satires the moral indignation of some and illustrates how women were treated as second class citizens and held to a different set of moral standards. 4.…
19th Century advocate for the cause of women’s suffrage, Susan B. Anthony, delivered a speech in 1873 following her conviction for the crime of voting. Anthony’s purpose is to argue that the treatment of women during the 19th Century was unjust and unconstitutional. She adopts a respectful and candid tone in order to address the sexism and prejudicial views of society. Anthony uses rhetorical devices in her speech in order to appeal to her audience’s sense of unity and human compassion.…
Then she uses diction to build her readers faith in what she is saying is the truth. Ultimately expressing that the words we choose to use affect the way people feel about what we are…
In 1851 at the Women’s Convention in Akron, Ohio, an African American woman named Sojourner Truth gave a speech defending women’s rights. In this speech, she proved that women were capable of doing tough jobs like men. That they had the ability to go to school and get an education, and make the world a better place just like any man can do. Truth proved that the stereotypes given to women were inaccurate, and showed the audience what women were capable of doing. She fought for the rights of both white and African American women, because she believed in equality.…
Sonia Sotomayor, a judge, in her speech Opening Statement to The Senate Judiciary Committee, describes her past and her accomplishments such as all of her experience being a judge and her nomination into the supreme court by president Obama. She writes about her experiences and shares her accomplishments so that her audience sees why she is a good candidate to be in the supreme court. Sotomayor’s purpose is to persuade and seek the support of the judges and America for her election into the supreme court. She supports her purpose with rhetorical appeals such as ethos and pathos. Sotomayor uses an optimistic tone and rhetorical appeals in order to convey her audience to vote for her to be in the Supreme court.…
Despite the natural rights and humane principles presented in our nation, we are not all treated equally. Our modern world struggles with social and racial discrimination, despite lawful efforts to prevent such attrocities. This has impacted our society through unspeakable means, and has molded many of our beliefs and ideals regarding the freedom and equality of those around us and how they strive to rightfully earn and represent these privleges. These thoughts were much different in 1832, however, and are demonstrated through Maria W. Stewart's lecture. Through careful utilization of the three rhetorical strategies, Stewart enables herself to appeal to logic, emotion, and ethics to persuade her audience of her personal (although biased)…