In Sojourner Truth “Ain’t I a Woman?” speech she uses a well strategic plan to defend women’s position during the 1850s. Truth, could have made a speech that just talked about how women could help this country or do the same work men can do. Instead Truth gave her speech in a more conversational way or a storytelling matter to grab the attention of her audience. She incorporated examples of how men speak of women-how according to men that makes women less. With the examples she gave she also added her option and fired back by saying that women do not get picked up or women can eat as much as a man can. By her doing that in her speech she doing exactly what women do not do and that is standing up for one another and defending each other. Truth …show more content…
Anthony speech in 1873, She uses facts to back up her arugement and her main focus on her speech is to demonstrate how woman are not being treated the way it says in the United States Constitution. Apart from Truth, Anthony was another feminist activist who believed women should have the right to vote and be treated equally as men. However, when defending their stance on women rights both women use different methods to define what a women is. Anthony breaks down the key points that are written in the Constitution, she starts of by saying how this country was created by not just white male citizens but as well as woman who are white than she laters goes on to talk about the country is not a democracy but aristocracy. Anthony uses these very important ideas to show how the constitution contradicts what is written and women are not taken into consideration. Differently then Truth, she incorporates her experiences and what she has seen/heard about a women. She uses more of a sarcastic tone to justify why women are not any different than men. The speeches have something in common that is asked and that is What is a woman in the United States. Anthony and Truth both asked the same question to their audience but they themselves never give a direct
At the 1851 Women's Right Convention in Akron, Ohio Sojourner Truth, delivers a wonderful speech about women’s rights. Her speech is arguing the claim made by ministers that states, “: women were weak, men were intellectually superior to women, Jesus was a man, and our first mother sinned.” Sojourner Truth’s speech is to draw attention to the topic of women’s right. Implying that in this world women need to be helped when it comes to them being outside. For her, it is not even like the stereotype in which they have to be helped, because of her skin color. In her speech, Sojourner supports her claim about how women are treated differently except [especially for her because of her skin color] her by saying, Ain't I a woman.” This implies that she should be treated the same if other women are treated some sort. Which also circulates to the other idea in her speech, how women can do the exact same amount as men. If men can walk over mud the woman can do, they do not need help. If white women were helped then she should be helped as well. Connecting to her phrase “Ain't I a woman.” This idea attributes to both sides of her speech, which were equal rights, and how she should be treated the same as another woman. Allowing her voice to seem more intellectual, Sojourner adds all of the attributes of a woman (having kids, her arms). Which adds more support to her claim of why she is not treated the same as white women or even as a human. Who just happens to be women. Sojourner
In the speech “And Ain’t I a Woman” Sojourner Truth speaks on why women should have rights at the Woman’s Rights Convention in 1851. There were women, men, Methodist, Baptist, Episcopal, Presbyterian, and Universalist ministers in the church who didn’t want Sojourner Truth to speak from when she walked in the door because she was a woman. The writer Frances Gage said “Again and again, timorous and trembling ones came to me and said, with earnestness,” “Don’t let her speak, Mrs. Gage, it will ruin us. Every newspaper in the land will have our cause mixed up with abolition and niggers, and we shall be utterly denounced.” (Truth 875) In those
In the short story “The Most Dangerous Game” by Richard Connell, Sanger Rainsford, the protagonist, and General Zaroff, the antagonist, have similar life experiences and beliefs, but their one difference, the will to take a human life for sport, builds the suspense up to Rainsford killing Zaroff for the greater good. Zaroff and Rainsford share many life experiences that majorly impacts their conflict. For example, Rainsford set up three different animal traps to kill Zaroff and Zaroff recognized two of the three immediately because of the similar hunting experiences. Rainsford starts thinking like the General when he is setting up traps such as the Malay Man Catcher and the Burmese tiger pit. When Zaroff is hit by Rainsford’s first trap he says, “I, too, have hunted in Malacca,”(14) here right off the bat if it hadn’t been for Zaroff and Rainsford going to Malacca and learning the Malay Mancatcher then Zaroff might have been killed by Rainsford.
Anthony believed that regardless of gender or race, you as an American citizen should have the right to vote. Anthony voted without having a lawful right. She wanted to prove that she did not commit a crime, but instead she wanted to provide she exercised her human right. She was arrest because her vote was illegal because she was a women. After Anthony’s arrest, she gave a speech about illegally casting her vote and the point she was trying to make by voting. In Susan B. Anthony’s speech, she states “We, the people who formed the union. And we formed it, not to give the blessings of liberty, but to secure them”. To elaborate further on this statement, Anthony means that since America was built on having freedom and liberty, why don’t all people to include women have the right to
Susan B. Anthony inspired to fight for women’s right while camping against alcohol..along with Elizabeth Cady Stanton also an activist, Anthony and Stanton founded the NWSA . Which helped the two women to go around and produced The Revolution, a weekly publication that lobbied for women’s rights.She also went on saying that if women ever wanted to get reaction men had…only thing stopping them,..having voting rights. An american social reformer and women’s right activist who played a pivotal role in the women’s suffrage movement, also a teacher who aggregate and compare about nature. She gave the “Women’s Rights to the Suffrage” giving outside the jail she was going to be held in, she gave this speech in person in 1873 and her audience were mostly white women that want virtues like men. Also men that wanted to put women in their place and friends of her and fellow citizens. Her main points are that women needed power that men had. Growing up in a quaker household she knew that women needed honor as men just like slaves experience getting their freedom. In Women’s right to suffrage Susan B. Anthony uses tone, reparation,and logos which dematices why women should have equal morality and voting abilities as men.
The women’s right movement began in 1843 in Seneca Falls, New York, which sparked the revolution of women obtaining equal rights. In 1920, females are finally given a voice, however; African American women weren’t given suffrage until the 1970’s. One woman named Sojourner Truth stood up for all women for women’s rights with her famous speech “Ain’t I a woman?” told at the Women’s Convention in Akron, Ohio in 1851. Truth argues that all girls’ specifically African American ladies should have the same rights as men since women can do the exact same thing stating she does the same work a man does and maybe even more since she was a slave at one point. The reason why Truth gets her message across is because she has credibility since she uses pathos by stating that 13 of her children are seized from her, ethos since she is a woman who once was a slave, logos by comparing the work an average white man does versus what the average African American woman do ,allusion by bringing Christ into the lecture stating that Christ came from God and a woman and that man has nothing to do with Christ since a woman gave birth to him, and juxtaposition by announcing that a man is contradicting himself on a statement he said. All
Sojourner Truth, the writer of An Account of an Experience with Discrimination and speaker of Ain’t I a Women and Speech at New York City Convention, faced many difficulties and oppressive times in her life. She went through several different owners and homes. When Truth got older, she had at least five kids, most of which were sold into slavery, with a slave named Thomas. Truth was granted freedom after the 1828 mandatory emancipation of slaves in New York and finally was emancipated. She began preaching on the streets about her religious life. Truth changed her name from Isabella Van Wagener to Sojourner Truth because she wanted to “sojourn” the land and tell God’s “truth.” She moved to Northampton, Massachusetts to become apart of the abolitionist movement. During this time, the Civil War was occurring. The North was opposed to slavery and the South was for slavery. Truth addressed women’s rights repeatedly. She pointed out that the meetings about women’s suffrage were racially segregated. Truth gave many public speeches throughout Ohio, Indiana, Missouri, and Kansas. Truth used an approach when giving speeches called rhetorical strategy. She was extremely opinionated and pointed out a good argument about slaves creating the country and receiving no credit for it. She also made a good point when talking about women’s rights: “If the first woman God ever made was strong enough to turn the world
Some would argue that Susan B. Anthony’s speech on the rights of women voters was not an entirely effective argument. The quickest opposing viewpoint would be to attack Anthony as a credible source; after all, she just had been arrested and was awaiting her trial – a trial that would end in a guilty verdict (Linder, “Trial”). It is hard to believe that someone that broke the law could be a reliable source. An additional argument against Anthony’s credibility
To begin with, the speaker of "Ain't I a Women" is Isabelle Baumfree. Isabelle Baumfree was born in Hurley, New York on 1797. Unfortunately, she was born into slaves, and like most slaves, she experienced the agonies by being brutally beaten and abused. As indicated in her biography, "In late 1826, she escaped to freedom with her infant daughter, Sophia. Her other daughter and son stayed behind.” (Biography.com). In 1827, she at long last turns out to be free when New York abolished slavery. As the vast majority perceive her today, she changed her name to Sojourner Truth. Ms. Truth becomes a well know activist not only for women’s rights but as well for civils rights. As indicated by the National Historic Park in New York, "At the 1851 Women’s Rights Convention held in Akron, Ohio, Sojourner Truth delivered.… “Ain’t I a Woman?” (NPS.gov). The audience of the
Furthermore, She provides a strong tone that evaluates the potential of a woman. She presents her speech with facts and with confidence and passion. Her tone is trying to motivate young women to act up and take action. Along the way in her speech she makes up a sarcastic tone by claiming that “[women]do not have executive ability, orderly minds, stability, leadership skills, and they are too emotional”(Chisholm, 149). The use of this tone provides affirmation that conveys young women to feel capable of doing anything that men can do. These words don’t define the potential of women nor their abilities. Women are strong, women can take anything, women are smart, women have leadership. Just like Chisholm, women have a voice to speak up and advocate for a change. Throughout her positives tones, she also presents an emotional appeal to the youth who are going to college and are struggling. In reality, some women don’t get the same opportunity as others.“...when a young woman graduates from college…she is likely to have a frustrating and demanding experience ahead of her”(Chisholm, 149). Women face challenges with their eligibility when applying to jobs. Looking for a job is not as easy for women, it takes time and persistence. Unlike men, who are seen as
Ain't I a Woman?" ,the name given to a speech, delivered extemporaneously, by Sojourner Truth, (1797–1883),she gave this speech to the Women’s Convention of 1851, she speaks on the inequalities that women and blacks faced at that time in America. she uses rhetorical strategies in order to achieve a successful and powerful delivery of her message.Sojourner uses personal experiences to get an emotional response from her audience, connecting with them as both women and mothers.Sojourner Truth uses Anaphora,Logos,Ethos and Rhetorical question in order to rebut opposing arguments for gender equality.
Truth grew very thankful for Thompson’s manners. They then travelled by train to Rochester were they met former Quakers that were abolitionists and also fought for women’s rights: Amy and Isaac Post. The Posts remained friends with Truth their entire lifetime. Truth lived with the Posts throughout the winter of 1851 and she sold her books at meetings with Thompson in western New York and Ohio. Sojourner then traveled to Salem, Ohio and lived with Marius and Emily Robinson, who had similar beliefs as the Post’s. At the Ohio Women’s Rights Convention Truth made her superb “Ar’n’t I a Women?” speech and startled the audience. The main point of this speech was to show that fighting for equal rights for women with men was not enough. Other women, including African Americans, faced additional obstacles. Truth wanted the participants to not only dedicate their lives to ending sexism but also to assist all people to achieve equality. Truth’s friend and host, Maurice Robinson wrote, “Those only can appreciate it who saw her powerful form, her whole-souled, earnest gestures, and listened to her strong and truthful tones.” He basically says her speech was top-notch and spectacular and
I would say she succeed in proving her point because after 48 years women were given the right to vote. So, maybe, it took a long time for them to finally get the right, but after Anthony gave her speech, women fought for so
The first female author who focuses the political aspects of feminism is Sojourner Truth. She demonstrates how women do not have recognition to present their own voices in politics through the use of parallelism and antithesis. Truth was a former slave who advocates the rights for blacks and women. Her speech to the American Equal Rights Association on May 9, 1867, addresses her dissatisfaction toward colored men getting their rights while women were being excluded. She also argues that women are also human beings and that they should
On May 29, 1851, Sojourner Truth gave her most famous speech at the Women’s Convention in Akron, Ohio. Truth, being born a slave and escaping to her freedom, was both a women’s rights activist and abolitionist. In a male-dominated society, Truth wanted to gain awareness for the inequalities of women and African Americans during the time period. She makes several claims how African Americans and women are not inferior to the white male population. By targeting those males, Truth portrays them as antagonists and thus gives the women and the African Americans something to focus their struggles on. Sojourner Truth attempts to persuade her audience to support the women’s rights movement and on subtler terms, to support the need for African