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Rhetorical Analysis Of Martin Luther King Jr.'s I Have A Dream Speech

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Martin Luther King Jr.’s ability to connect to his audience while speaking about the injustices of race in America has made the “I Have A Dream” speech a primary example for future talks on the difficult subject. He was able to show he had the power to transform people’s anger and resentment about being colored in America into hope and passion, by proving that race is a social construct that can be changed. The first way in which MLK Jr. did this was by grounding his text on the Black oral tradition of religion. The way a speech is delivered plays a huge role in its effectiveness. The cadence of his speech, the way it was presented rhythmically to the audience, is very similar to the way a pastor spreads his knowledge of the Bible to his congregation. By doing this, it was as if the viewers were listening …show more content…

In this way, Dr. King was able to connect to his viewers’ emotions in the sense that he took the common practice of religion and incorporated it to add humanity and life to his words of race, a relationship many of us didn’t know existed. These complex references were something everyone was able to understand and enjoy because it did not involve the barrier of education, something many colored people struggled with because of the lack of educational opportunities they received in the segregated South. He was able to forge a complex relationship between religion and race, and make it easily comprehensible to people of all different lifestyles by using the perfect point of comparison, something that is not often seen today. Lastly, he was able to show that race is a very complex and difficult issue, but one that can be solved because it is socially constructed, which means that race is not a determination of anything besides what we choose to

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