Abigail Adams Essay

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    As the wife of John Adams, Abigail Adams became politically involved in the government part of the American Revolution. However, only her husband hears her concerns as he begins to establish the roots of the new nation. Three months prior to the official approval of the Declaration of Independence, Abigail Adams expresses the need of inclusion of women’s rights in the new laws in a series of letters to her husband. These letters during the American Revolution show the beliefs of white male supremacy

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    In Abigail Adams’ letter to her son, John Adams, she attempts to persuade him into taking advantage of his opportunity to gain knowledge and learn through allusions and metaphors. Adams starts her letter by explaining her reasoning for forcing her son to travel to France. Her tone expresses some quilt, but she explains her reasoning through a metaphor. She compares a, “judicious traveller to a river, that increases its stream...running through rich veins of minerals, improve their qualities as they

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    of Abigail Smith Adams is global and has transcended the limitation of age. The foresight and thinking of Abigail Adams made her a modern female. In the nineteenth century, patriarchal society, women did not need to get too much education. However, Abigail knew the poetry, literature, philosophy and politics. In American colonial period, Abigail Adams was a rare example of becoming talented through self-education. She even always discussed the politics of American with her husband John Adams. Abigail

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    On the twelfth of January 1780, Abigail Adams sent a letter to her son. In this letter, she speaks of her son's second voyage to France with his father to sign the Treaty of Paris of 1783. She wishes for him to represent not only their family but the United States in general. In addition to this she also wishes for him to not only make her proud but himself proud. In the letter to her son, John Q. Adams, Abigail Adams reminds him that he has advantages in life and to use them to br the best person

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    Mrs. Abigail Adams incorporates pathos, logos and allusion in advising her son about his trip to France. While the revolutionary war is coming to a close in 1780, young John Adams accompanies his father and brother in his “second voyage to France.” John Quincy Adams, future president of the United States, doesn’t realize the importance of this voyage and observing his father being a diplomat in France. This is why Mrs. Adams finds the importance of writing a letter to give counsel to her son and

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    Abigail Adams

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    intellectual and led to more affection and shared authority. Abigail Adams was and intellectual partner for her husband by assisting him in making decisions, Benjamin Rush believed in the education of women. Lucy Knox was for sharing the authority in relationships. The Cadwalader portrait illustrates the affection. Abigail Adams was an intellectual partner for her husband and kind of an advisor to her husband, former President John Adams. “he relied on her advice more than on members of his cabinet”

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    1st Lady, Abigail Adams, in her letter, advises her son, John Quincy Adams, to travel and learn. Adams’ purpose is to urge him to have no regrets and learn from his experiences. She adopts an affectionate tone in order to convince him to live his life to the fullest and take advantage of his opportunities in hope of becoming a great and powerful man. In the first paragraph of the letter, Adams is using a slightly insulting tone towards her son for not wanting to travel with his father, though in

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    that time she famously hung her family's laundry in the unfinished East Room to dry. Throughout President John Adams' career, his wife, Abigail Adams, served as an unofficial adviser. On New Year's Day 1801 she opened the mansion, soon to be known as the White House. When he was elected President Adams wrote to his wife, "I never wanted your Advice and assistance more in my life..." Adams often defended her husband's positions. She attacked was, at times, for being too much an influence on her husband's

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    In Abigail Adams’ letter to her son John Quincy Adams, (1780) she provides him with advice as he is traveling abroad with his father John Adams. As she writes this letter to her son she uses certain rhetorical strategies to make her letter more comforting for her son. Abigail Adams uses rhetorical strategies such as juxtaposition, her tone, and her appeal to emotion. Abigail Adams does this to kind of give her son a form of hope and that she strongly believes in him. Without them the, letter wouldn’t

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    In Abigail Adams’ letter to her son John Quincy Adams, she uses many rhetorical strategies to advise her son. Some of those strategies include pathos, diction,and repetition. Throughout the letter, she’s using her calm and soft motherly voice so that she’ll be able to get her point across to her son. John Quincy Adams, who is traveling aboard with his father, John Adams, a United States diplomat and later the country’s second president is also running for the same position. Abigail, John’s

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