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Rhetorical Analysis Of Civil Disobedience

Decent Essays

Kami Lanham
Senior English
Mr. Polley pd. 3
3/10/16
Rhetorical Analysis The author Henry Thoreau’s interpretation of the role in which the government is to play in the going ons of everyday society in relationship to taxes in which they charge, in the letter Civil Disobedience is considered borderline insanity by some and ingenious by most. However it is theorized that said letter is written as an emotional outburst of rage, passion, and indignation. In being forced to pay, in his eyes, unjust taxes, back an unconstitutional war, and being lumped into a society that he himself did not make a conscious effort to join. Rather than being backed by facts and credible sources. With the focus almost solely upon pathos with a profound lack of ethos …show more content…

He relies mostly upon emotion to back up his many, if not eccentric, claims upon how the government is to interfere with day to day life. One such occurrence of this method is at the top of page seven Thoreau states that “If you are cheated out of a single dollar by your neighbor, you do not rest satisfied with knowing that you are cheated, or with saying that you are cheated… but you take effectual steps at once to obtain the full amount, and see that you’re never cheated again.” By using this example the author calls upon one of the most primal of all human emotions, the one that leads some to greatness and others to death, the emotion that has been the driving force behind the advancement of the human race since the dawn of time. This emotion is greed. By causing his readers to subconsciously tap into this emotion Thoreau appeals to a much larger and more diverse …show more content…

This being the leading cause as to why many have brushed aside the letter Civil Disobedience as a work of emotional rage rather than the civil informative work that we are led to assume he was attempting to portray. One of the very few instances in which pathos is used is, on page four at the top of paragraph two, Thoreau sites Paley, “Paley, a common authority with many on moral questions… resolves all civil obligation into expediency.” While this is not up to the standard in which one would expect from a highly educated man such as Thoreau it is one of only a small handful of times he uses any source of credibility in his work and, or sites another credible

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