The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965) by Alex Haley, deliberates influencing writing with the uses of simple rhetoric devices. This is developed through the many stages of Malcolm's life: on the streets of Harlem, his wonders in the Nation of Islam and Mecca, as he evaluates his views on racialism, politics, and spiritually. In Malcolm's childhood, his memories from Ku Klux Klan come back, since the destruction his family were backgrounds of hardship. the biographies compact style makes an excellent track for Malcolm's life with the use of figurative language, evolving imagery, memorable quotes, and different syntax. Later on, during the Depression-era, the separates his family, as he ends up his in Boston and
then New York. Racism and prejudice experiences have followed Malcolm since, his young age. His years of teenage arrive, as he adopts the white people's culture, but gradually he sets his life to prison and drugs. In prison he meets Elijah Muhammad, experiencing a self-transformation. Once out of prison he travels down to the Middle East and visualizes a different view towards racism and hierarchy, becoming on of the the the leaders in the ministry. As he travels back to the United States. He has a new outlook and can see the discrimination throughout the country. Malcolm X did not accomplish his expand of transformations, since he was assassinated giving a speech in New York. Though as mentioned above the development in this biography has tense uses of figurative language, evolving imagery, memorable quotes, and different syntax.
The developmental figurative language in Malcolm X is expressed in a powerful