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Rhetorical Analysis Of I Have A Dream Speech

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“I Have a Dream” Rhetorical Analyzation One hundred years after the signing of the Emancipation Proclamation to stop slavery, Martin Luther King, Jr. presented the “I Have a Dream” speech to thousands of people. The day Luther King, Jr.’s speech was the day of the March on Washington, which was for the support of the rights o colored citizens, and for the termination of segregation. King delivered this speech with a tone of hope and determination in order to convince colored people to fight for their rights and persuade the citizens that all lives matter and should be treated equally. He also delivered it in order to urge the rights these people deserved. Luther stood before all these people to express his thoughts on equality and the rights his people were stripped of. Kings’ audience consisted of the citizens of America that believed in equality for all races. In the “I Have a Dream” Speech, Martin Luther King, Jr used many metaphors, similes, analogies, Pathos, and Mythos to connect with his audience on a superior level and develop his tone. In the “I Have a Dream” speech, Martin Luther King, Jr. uses many metaphors and similes to emphasize the struggles of Blacks that were treated unfairly. King states, “This monumental degree is a great beacon light of hope to millions of Negro slaves who had been seared in the flames of withering injustice.” where he compares slavery to flames. Flames are usually thought of as a strong power that can terminate. When Martin Luther King, Jr. compares slavery to flames, he wants his audience to picture slavery as a ball of fire clearing Blacks of not only the justice and equality they deserve but also their dignity as humans. In the beginning of this speech, King used a simile that really popped out. Martin said, “It came as a joyous daybreak to end the long night of their captivity.” Here he is speaking about the Emancipation Proclamation and that it gave hope to Blacks. King was explaining how the signing of this was like a “breakthrough” for blacks. It gave blacks hope that one day they would be completely free, except even one hundred years after the signing of this by Abraham Lincoln, colored citizens were still not treated equally. He uses this figurative

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