Often times authors use rhetoric to give a deeper meaning to their work. In the story “Cannibals All, Or Slaves Without Masters”, George Fitzhugh uses personification to give a deeper, emotional feeling of the constant battle between the North and the South. As fitzhugh claims, in the attempt to attain “transition” seas of gore may be shed until military despotism comes in to restore peace and security (page 369). The author personifies the sea, because a sea can not literally bring blood shed. As the quote say, “Seas of gore,” it is suggesting the idea of a blood bath, the war that is soon to come and can only be prevented by the military “to restore peace and security”.…
Calling for military emancipation makes it difficult to declare who actually freed the slaves before the ratification of the thirteenth amendment. The slaves who ran to Union lines were freed with the document, but they ran to the military on their own will. Lincoln did not have anything to do with their running away because it has happened for centuries. It is this fact that makes the efficiency of the Emancipation Proclamation questionable. If the document did not remove the slaves from their masters and no one enforced it, how could it be efficient? Gates, Bennett, and Lincoln made the observation that the document only freed the males that joined the union. This makes it difficult to find records of exactly how many slaves the document…
In conclusion, the use of rhetorical devices helps Douglass to voice his opinion to his audience. With the rhetorical devices, he accomplishes his audience to rethink their old opinion about slavery. Before, they knew that slavery was bad, but did not do anything to stop the punishment. Now the audience is aware what injustice and hypocrisy slavery caused, and they will try to stop the abuse.…
Slavery, the dark beast that consumes, devours, and pillages the souls of those who are forced to within its bounds and those who think they are the powerful controllers of this filth they call business. This act is the pinnacle of human ignorance, they use it as the building blocks for their “trade,” and treat these people no more than replaceable property that can be bought, sold, and beaten on a whim. The narrative of Frederick Douglass is a tale about a boy who is coming of age in a world that does not accept him for who he is and it is also told as a horror that depicts what we can only imagine as the tragedies placed on these people in these institutions of slavery. It is understood as a chronicle of his life telling us his story from childhood to manhood and all that is in between, whilst all this is going on he vividly mixes pathological appeals to make us feel for him and all his brethren that share his burden. His narrative is a map from slavery to freedom where he, in the beginning, was a slave of both body and mind. But as the story progresses we see his transformation to becoming a free man both of the law and of the mind. He focuses on emotion and the building up of his character to show us what he over time has become. This primarily serves to make the reader want to follow his cause all the more because of his elegant and intelligent style of mixing appeals. Through his effective use of anecdotes and vivid imagery he shows us his different epiphanies over time, and creates appeals to his character by showing us how he as a person has matured, and his reader’s emotion giving us the ability to feel for his situation in a more real sense. This helps argue that the institution of slavery is a parasitic bug that infects the slave holder with a false sense of power and weakens the slave in both body and spirit.…
No matter how vigorously one tries in their place of work, they, along with their peers, will all end up in the same place. This was the brutal truth Douglass’s grandmother, a slave, had to come to terms with when she was hurled into the woods where she was overtaken by loneliness and had suffered a prolonged death. Sadly, this was the case even after having taken substantial care for her slaveholder from his birth to his demise. Merriam Webster defines dedication as; self sacrificing, dedication, and loyalty; his grandmother was described as devoted to her work, and an overall warm hearted individual. The presumption that a person that differs from ourself is wicked and morally wrong, when it comes to Frederick Douglass, his message of parity among all races distinguishes him from slaves…
The 1800’s were hard times for those who weren’t white males. Every other human being was basically considered a minority including American woman and African Americans. There came a point where the minority groups had enough of their voices being ignored which is when fearless leaders in each group appeared. Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Fredrick Douglas were the brave souls of their groups. Douglas and Stanton were leaders of two different minorities but fought for similar causes, with the powerful use of metonymy, invection, and allusions their cry for equality ignited a spark that hasn’t let out to this day.…
Although Douglass was speaking to a diverse audience, it was more to show slave owners the life of being a slave by using rhetorical strategies. In Douglass’ story “What to a Slave is the Fourth of July”, he was trying to give all slaves a voice. Obviously, this did not end slavery entirely but it did help the fight.…
In Douglass’s Narrative of The Life of Frederick Douglass an American Slave and Ali’s Infidel both authors adopt comparable rhetorical strategies due to their similar experiences with oppression. In the Narrative of The Life of Frederick Douglass an American Slave, Douglass recounts his life as a slave and journey to freedom. Douglass’s upbringing as a second-class citizen in antebellum Maryland mirrors Ayaan Hirsi Ali’s experience as a woman in the traditional Muslim world. As both authors transition from their former oppressive environments to freedom, they both depict their experience using similar strategies. Douglass’s and Ali’s first view of New Bedford and Germany initiate the deinternalization of their oppressions enabling them to view…
Throughout American history racial tension has always been strong, but as time went on, factory workers began outnumbering farmers, and the tension began easing. This gradual change is evident mostly when comparing two books. Slavery by Another Name, a book written in 2008 by Douglas A. Blackmon to show the world that indentured servitude continued well past emancipation. Along with “The Jungle” which was a book written 1906 by Upton Sinclair, Jr. but then shortened into an article, to alert the general public to the indiscriminatory horrors of factory life that affected workers of all races. Slavery by Another Name was showed high levels of racial tension whereas “The Jungle” had little to no racial hostility.…
In the late 1940’s through the late 1950’s McCarthyism was a wide spread epidemic here in America. The government had a very intense suspicion that there were influences of communism on our soil. Many were accused and prosecuted for “un-American activities” throughout the states. The FBI had no grounds or evidence to stand on when accusing these people. The Salem witch trials in The Crucible were very similar to these situations. Witten by Arthur Miller The Crucible was Miller’s way of protesting and speaking out against these trials while trying not to draw any attention to him. He uses many rhetorical devices to help better his message as it if brought forth to the reader. Irony, repetition, imagery, and metaphors are examples of some of the devices Miller uses to capture the reader and keep the story on track with the protest of McCarthyism.…
This is because each parent defines success differently. The question of how to raise a child…
In South Central, Los Angeles, there is a food epidemic taking place among the population. For miles and miles, the only easily attainable food source is fast food; causing the overconsumption of un-nutritious, greasy, and fattening food. This is the problem brought to the public’s attention by speaker Ron Finley in his Ted Talks speech, “A Guerilla Gardener in South Central L.A.” Finley explains how everywhere he looks in his native South Central, all he sees are fast food chains and Dialysis clinics opened due to the lack of nutritious food. Finley views the lack of a healthy food source as a serious problem, and brings up his point; there are miles of vacant lots throughout Los Angeles, all of which could be used for the cultivation of healthy fruits and vegetables to better the urban community’s diet and health.…
I believe that the rhetorical strategy of narration is both seen differently in the article, “Unnatural Killers”, by John Grisham and the article, “The Case Against College Athletic Recruiting” by Ben Adler. Both appeal emotionally to the reader but one is a lot more logical in its approach then the other.…
Well-known Sci-fi writer, Ray Bradbury, in his novel, Fahrenheit 451, illustrates that relationships reflect who individuals are and who they want to be. Bradbury’s purpose is to promote the idea that a person should have the courage to listen to their own beliefs and thoughts of happiness rather than to blend in with society. He adopts a disoriented and poetic tone in order to appeal to similar feelings and experiences on a non-realistic scale in his young adult readers.…
The issue of Slavery, though believed by some to be no longer evident, is still, unfortunately, a huge industry throughout the entire world. A few include, sweatshops, sex trades, and even drug cartels. All these plague society, of the, “modern world.” Even though, many years ago, we claimed to have, “abolished,” slavery, the true reality, is that we only ended it in one aspect, in one place. We don't truly look at what still exists. We turn our back to the real issues, to simply pretend that they don't exist.…