Letter From a Birmingham Jail Essay

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    In 1963, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. wrote Letter from Birmingham Jail that went on to become one of the most controversial and important pieces of work during the Civil Rights Movement. Like many other well written rhetorics, King alludes and uses Aristotle’s three main appeals: logos, pathos, and ethos. How does King uses these appeals in his rhetoric? King effectively uses these appeals to evoke his audience’s emotion to feel remorseful for the extremity that African Americans went through and

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    infamous “Letter from Birmingham Jail” to white clergymen about rights of blacks. Although Martin Luther King Jr.'s various applications of rhetorical appeals and devices added to the "Letter From Birmingham Jail,” pathos and ethos had the most advantage to enhance the letter because they allowed the audience to have an emotional connection to African-American lives and shows the education and trustworthiness of MLK. Dr. King uses pathos heavily throughout the “Letter from Birmingham Jail” as a way

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    destination.  Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. knew this concept well.  In 1963, King wrote the “Letter from Birmingham Jail”.  Determined to destroy the injustice of racism in America, he set out with the goal of reaching his destination.  His undying will eventually landed him in a jail cell, but that did not stop him, he kept going and forced the obstacle aside.  From the jail cell, he wrote this letter.  In his letter, he talks about many different solutions that our nation could use to resolve the problem

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    you visualize when you think of a jail cell? Some might see restraints blocking them off from the rest of the world, feel cold metal or scratchy cloth against their skin, or experience the stench of sweat and despair. Martin Luther King Jr. saw a quiet place to write. After being arrested under the charge of “parading without a permit,” Dr. King used his eleven days in the Birmingham City Jail to respond to one specific instance of criticism through a letter geared to each of the many audiences

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    While imprisoned in Birmingham Jail, Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. received a letter from the local clergymen that condemned his actions, calling them rash and extreme. In response, Dr. King wrote his own letter back defending his decisions. In his Letter from Birmingham Jail, Dr. King appeals to ethos and pathos as he attempts to convince the clergymen of the need for direct action in Birmingham, by showing the similarities in his own struggles and those faced by countless historical and biblical

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    Analysis of The Letter From Birmingham Jail. Martin Luther King Jr. was a baptist minister and civil rights activist who made major advancements in civil rights for blacks. He led many nonviolent protests in Alabama during the 1950s and 1960s. King was the president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. He was instrumental in the creation of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 and the Voting Rights Act of 1965. He played a key role in ending the legal segregation of blacks by showing how they

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    marched the streets into Birmingham leading Fifty three fellow African Americans on Good Friday in 1963. King and his fellow African American’s were protesting about the already existing segregation laws: they were all arrested by clergymen and thrown into the Birmingham Jail. The clergymen of Birmingham wrote a letter, based on King’s and the other African American’s beliefs and protesting, asking the black community to stop the protesting of segregation laws. The letter king wrote in response to

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    is provided to them and is a privilege to gain everything through others. Unfortunately, it is sad to say that is not the case for some people. Some people are fighting for their last breath, some people do not know where their next meal is coming from, do not have any love ones nor friends, live in the streets, do not have any means for transportation, do not have a job or are making less than the minimum wage, and are unable to provide for themselves and/or their families. The reason for this

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    In the letter, “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. informs the readers of the reasons how and why he is giving a nonviolent protest to racism. King begins the letter stating how he was invited to Birmingham and how he is trying to fight against the “injustice.” In his letter King continues on to explain that the black men have waited to long for justice and they are still fighting it in the present today through the unjust laws. The white churches were brought up negatively

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    6 Tristen Hall Ms. Edwina Mosby English Composition I/II 10/28/17 Rhetorical Analysis: Letter from Birmingham Jail Summary/Assessment: Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. authored the pivotal and revolutionary Letter from Birmingham Jail. The letter is addressed to eight white clergymen in the South who have deemed King's nonviolent campaign as "unwise and untimely" (1). King justifies himself for being in Birmingham, and why he could not take on an individualistic attitude. If one part of America is affected

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