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Rhetorical Essay In Judy Brady's I Want A Wife

Decent Essays

In the essay “I Want a Wife” by Judy Brady, the speaker uses satire to explain the absurdity of the expectations placed on a wife in 1970s America. The intended purpose of the text is to promote the new wave of feminist ideologies. Through the satire, repetition, and rhetorical questions Brady establishes credibility in order to exemplify illogical standards and working relationships to society.
Throughout the essay Brady uses satire to highlight the lack of logic in the expectations placed on a wife during a time when women are beginning to work as well as care for the home. She uses the example that a wife should not bother her spouse with “rambling complaints” about her duties but that she should always lend an ear when her spouse needs …show more content…

To enforce this point, Brady uses the term “my” instead of “ours” on the topic of a wife’s responsibility to care for the home and children. “...take care of my children” and “keep my house clean” are examples used to emphasize to the reader the unfair level of power and control a man holds in a 1970s American marriage, and to encourage female readers to introspect their own relationships and begin enforcing a more level dynamic of responsibility within their own households. Consistent with the rest of the text, Brady’s use of repetition also infuses humor, giving the essay a tone of childish demand.
Though not used frequently throughout the essay, Brady’s infusion of rhetorical questions at the beginning and end of the essay incite thought, clarity, and majorly impact the reader’s reception of her points. Brady ends the second paragraph with the rhetorical question, “Why do I want a wife?”, and begins the next paragraph with the formation of her argument. The employment of this rhetorical question previous to beginning any argument clues the reader into the purpose of the essay, and allows them to focus less on deciphering the subject matter and more on the substance and persona of the speaker. It’s position in the essay also prompts thought and curiosity, and therefore also inciting a better understanding of the body of the essay. Brady also uses the rhetorical question, “My God, who wouldn’t want a

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