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Alexandra Cousteau is a filmmaker that works with National Geographic. She is recognized for being an advocate of water issues and continuing her grandfather’s work. The speech was held at WSRE Jean and Paul Amos Performance Studio and was sponsored by WSRE Public Square Speakers Series. The studio was like a movie theater with seats going all the way up with the Middle Island where the audio in camera was. The stage had a red rectangle in the middle and a podium off to the right with a big screen in the background. The general purpose of the speech was to give her background and also bring up some of the issues that are plaguing our water systems today. The speaker’s specific purpose was to inform but hopefully persuade people to take action.…
Topic: Florence Kelley makes an argument for a mimimum wage in her 1912 article in the Journal of Political Economy. How does she argue that mimimum wage laws are especially relevant to women? Compare Kelley’s advocacy to Helen Keller’s arguments in “Why Men Need Woman Suffrage.” How do Kelley and Keller each suggest that women be “protected”?…
Hillary Clinton and Jane Addams both saw a need for labor reform nearly one hundred years apart. Clinton and Addams’s progressive ideas are similar in which they want all workplaces to be safe for the employees, a day’s wage to increase in order to satisfactorily provide for employees families, and a stable future for when the workers reach retirement. Jane Addams drew her focus on child labor. The industrial revolution brought the concept of child labor. Children were working in places such as mills and factories, with unhealthy working conditions and little to no wages. Addams was strongly against child labor and it’s abuse and at the 1903 annual meeting of the National Conference of Charities and Corrections, she stated that, “…It has come…
Florence Kelley uses several rhetoric devices in order to make her claim about the insufficient working conditions for women and children. The use of rhetorical devices adds to her ability to make her case. By using such language, Kelley successfully delivers her message in a way that would compel the reader to agree. She uses a mixture of diction, syntax, and emotional appeal in order to really have her point stick with the reader and cause them to think about the cause she is trying to support.…
A once hot topic became a now law-enforced face. Child labor has been a controversial issue and Florence Kelley was one of the many protestors that brought success to the child labor laws. She was an avid fighter and was not only against child labor laws but also woman’s suffrage. On July 22, 1905, Kelley gave and impeccable speech at the Convention of National American Woman Suffrage Association in Philadelphia about child labor laws. To successively persuade her listeners, Kelley used versatile amounts of strategies, ranging from repetition of key words, to ethical appeal and even inserting political allusions. Florence Kelley utilized persuasive techniques to convey her message that she is dearly passionate about.…
Write an introduction about the components of Ms. Josephine Baker’s speech. Your introduction must be based on the ideas, concepts and information from the text.…
Henry’s “Speech to the Second Virginia Convention” and Smith’s “Declaration of Conscience” were given for a single purpose. Henry and Smith both saw the need for unity, but their speeches had both similarities and differences. Their style of writing, want for interconnection, and why they wanted the country to come together are some of the main points of the speeches.…
Elle Woods (Reese Witherspoon) delivers the student address at Harvard Law School’s 2004 graduation ceremony in the movie Legally Blond. In the film Elle is a misguided student who gets accepted into law school upon false pretenses, merely to get back with her ex-boyfriend. He broke up with her because she was not suitable to be a future Senators wife, he claimed she lacked intelligence and only had her looks to depend on. Everyone’s doubt pushed her to stay determined, confident, and come to the conclusion that she does not need a man to justify her life. She also realizes that passion fuels the ability to become successful. This speech is very effective because of the rhetorical appeals of ethos, logos, and pathos used throughout.…
“We want rights, we want rights.” People in america after the war would protest against the government.Such protest is known as shay's rebellion. They were controversial for some people. Although Many people and documents state Shay’s rebellion are reckless rebels, Nevertheless they should be seen and recognized as freedom fighters because, they stood up for others, they aimed to help their country, and kept the gov’t aware of the needs of the country.…
Kaitlin Krause presented herself well and maintained a strong connection with the audience. Cecilia Byrnes had an impressive speech, but looked away from the audience during some points. Michele Ronzon had great content, but was more reserved and lacked connection with her peers.…
Debra Wuichet is a Licensed Clinical Social Worker from University of Tennessee. She is the Director of Social Services at North Mississippi State Hospital and has been working there for sixteen years. Her topic of the presentation was mental illnesses and schizophrenia. I really enjoyed her speech because I had little previous knowledge of mental illness. Even though I have taken a few classes that discussed the illnesses, I can understand better with stories or a way to imagine a situation and Debra provided that. Information that I thought I knew, was stuff I had assumed from watching television shows and movies. Most of that information is inaccurate.…
In Philadelphia on July 22, 1905, social worker and reformer, Florence Kelley, stands before mothers and wives of men who can vote at the National American Woman Suffrage Association convention. During his convention Kelley delivers a successful speech on the importance of child labor laws. As fellow suffragette, Kelley incorporates rhetorical strategies such as the appeal to guilt, rhetorical questions, and imagery in order to place a sense of urgency on the importance of child labor laws.…
In America, there used to be unfair laws and regulations regarding labor. Children are put to work in harsh conditions, conditions often deemed difficult even for adults, and are forced to work ridiculous hours. Florence Kelley gave a speech at the National American Woman Suffrage Association in Philadelphia on July 22, 1905. In her speech, Kelley uses repetition, pathos, imagery, logos, and carefully placed diction to express how child labor is morally wrong and inhumane.…
Florence Kelly vocalizes the harsh reality of child labor and explores the great wrongs that were brought upon women and children while suffrage was in full effect. Kelly opens her speech by stating statistics to appeal to the logical and emotional sides of her listeners. "Children under the age of 16 are doing hard-work..." as a social worker Kelly would have access to this information. Kelly goes on to explain that kids working may be supporting their families making it impossible to quit.…
I can picture myself standing there on that balmy day on August 28, 1963. The temperature is drifting around summer heights; but, it will tumble with the autumn leaves and flutter down to breezier temperatures soon. It is a time filled with anticipation: for change. The leaves cannot resist dressing themselves in sprinkles of red. The people are beginning to uncover jackets from the backs of closets. On this morning, 250,000 civil rights supports gather at the base of the Lincoln Memorial during the March on Washington to hear a speech that would bring about its own change—a change that would affect the lives of all of America.…