Initiating, Kennedy begins his speech by acknowledging those who have helped him
Initiating, Kennedy begins his speech by acknowledging those who have helped him
John F. Kennedy’s inauguration speech, a speech that gave his plans for the next four years of presidency, and unified all american citizens under one idea. Fifty years later, writer Eleanor Clift published an essay about her beliefs which she meant to show how the united states as a whole failed to carry on JFK’s legacy. JFK’s inaugural speech was very hopeful and positive, while Clift’s essay, “Inside Kennedy’s Inauguration, 50 years on”, was very rueful and somber. Although their purposes and tones contrast, the way that they both use different rhetorical devices makes it so they share one comparison, they both speak to the same audience.…
As a president of a biggest country of the world, we can see that our president is skillful speaker. He is the one of greatest american speakers. One of his famous speech is " Ask not what your country can do for you" when he is in his inaugural address. President Kennedy have used many of the tools in rhetorical or presuasive writing. He has full knowleged with Aristotle three areas of rhetorical such as: Ethos, Pathos and Logos.…
Equally important, Kennedy effectively uses rhetorical devices such as parallelism, alliteration, and repetition in his Inaugural Address to successfully express his goal for his presidency. For example, Kenney uses parallelism in perhaps his most memorable line of his Inaugural Address, “Ask not what you can do for your country- ask what you can do for your country” (Kennedy). Through parallelism, John F. Kennedy dramatically symbolizes his entire speech into one sentence. By reversing the order of the sentences, the president challenges mankind to withhold personal desires and instead focus on the needs of others. By using parallelism, President Kennedy is able to keep his audience interested. For instance, the president illustrates “power…
In the course of writing this address, John F. Kennedy and Theodore Sorensen, his advisor and…
On 1945, when the war on chaos finally went to an end, everything seemed to be going optimistic, however, without notice, the United States landed into another battlefield, the Cold War, which developed a rivalry and a sense of thread between two of the world powers. For the above reason, on January 20th, 1961, John F. Kennedy delivered in his inaugural address a sense of self-independence, security, and patriotism using rhetorical devices and rhetorical appeals to eradicate the results and effects of the Cold War.…
President John F. Kennedy (JFK) is the 35th president of the United States of America. On January 20, 1961, he made his Inaugural Address. In this speech, he addressed his goals for the nation when he says, "we shall pay any price, bear any burden, meet any hardship, support any friend, oppose any foe to assure the survival and success of liberty." By this means that as a nation, we should meet any needs necessary to maintain the freedom and justice of the people. He uses effective tactics and rhetorical devices, such as anaphora, chiasmus, and asyndeton, to maintain a conversational, yet clear and compelling, tone throughout the speech.…
On January 20, 1961 John Fitzgerald Kennedy delivered one of the powerful inaugural address in the nation’s history. The president’s unique style, personality, and his emotional feelings were presented in well-balanced sentences. The citizens that were present on that day considered the speech a success and can still remember it to this day.…
In the excerpt from John F. Kennedy's inaugural speech, many rhetorical terms are used to broaden and strengthen the idea of the passage and open the minds of the Americans.Through The use of diction, the choice of words, and syntax, how words are arranged, these ideas are further conveyed and helped to develop the purpose of his speech. With the rhetorical terms hyperbole, inductive reasoning, point of view, epiphany, and balanced sentence, Kennedy's speech is further understood.…
Based on former president John F. Kennedy’s 1963 America University Address, he’s view of the cold war, circa 1963, was world peace. The Soviet Union and the United States had fought as allies against Germany and Nazi during World War I. However, once the war ended, both nations seem to have disagreement on certain world matters. They seem to be at odds about the idea of a communist state. As a Senator, and during his presidential campaign, JFK and running mate Richard Nixon, demanded a tougher stance against the Soviet Union and all international communism. He had great fear of Soviet Union’s production of missiles, and wasn’t a great idea world peace.…
John F. Kennedy, the 35th president of United State of America, delivered an inaugural address which later became a precious historical record. In his passionate and cogent speech, Kennedy expressed a intense message to the whole world that, peace, in fact, can be achieved as long as people have faith toward freedom, and by using several writing strategies like Using Emotion-Arousing Words, Parallelism, Anaphora and so on, he efficiently showed that not only America, but also the whole world would benefit from the peaceful land that we all expected.…
Although John F. Kennedy’s inaugural address is one of the briefest documents in history, it perfectly describes what he plans to do in his time in being president. This speech goes over the period of the Cold War and other matters going on in the world in the early sixties. This was a period in which most Americans were worried about the planet, goals that need to be achieved to ensure the safety of the people of the U.S. and also the new technological advances that were being made. The United States was torn between racism in the 1960’s and Kennedy had to address that in his time in being the president. The Cold War was also at its peak during that time (Bragdon) and the people of the U.S. knew that Kennedy was a young and inexperienced president and were worried about how he was going to lead the nation in times of crisis.…
For centuries, a president’s inaugural address has held profound importance, and is expected to be a memorable one. John F. Kennedy’s in particular, was one of the most touching and inspiring inaugural addresses in our country’s history and it continues to be analyzed in classrooms, articles, and on television today. His words gained the people’s confidence that he had a positive future in store for America, and his moving statements kept the attention on him captivated. His uses of rhetorical strategies caused his arguments to be emphasized as well as considered, and he was able to say so much without boring those listening. He not only demonstrated the commitment that he was willing to make for the good of America, but he also encouraged citizens to join him in his effort. Regardless of the many methods Kennedy used to create his outstanding Address, the tone in which it was told is the most powerful one he used to win the crowd and earn their respect. His use of tone is effective in achieving his purpose- that those witnessing the speech desire to unite with Kennedy and overcome the common obstacles that faced their country together.…
In the world we have negative events on a daily bases such as: war, diseases, even death sometimes all of those taunting things are portrayed in the media like the news and social media as a society we can not help of being scared of the unknown. This is called national fear which means is when a nation is threatened about a cause. In the Inaugural Address, John F.Kennedy was facing issues for citizens to fight for people's rights and for people to be treated with respect no matter what race or gender. Civil right figureheads had courage and made sacrifices for a better a world that is now therefore let the purpose of fear motivate others to have courage and take risk. The speaker states, “ The world is very different now. For man holds in his mortal hands the…
President John F Kennedy, was the first president born in the twentieth century. Kennedy came back from the WWII as a hero. He saved his crew after the Japanese destroyer had rammed and sunk their ship. After his return home, he continued the family tradition to represent Boston by running for Senate in the U.S. House of Representatives, and served three terms. In 1956 Kennedy almost gained the Democratic nomination for Vice President, and four years later was a first-ballot nominee for President.…
President Dwight Eisenhower’s reputation, despite being one of the most famous generals in WWII, went dramatically downhill during his office as public viewed him often wander off to fishing and golf trips, leaving most of the official business to his White House assistants (Pach Jr. 2017). Thusly, America was in need of a new proactive, younger president. John F. Kennedy was the perfect candidate; young, charismatic and good eloquence. As the new hope of the American people, JFK already made a strong speech at his inauguration. It proved that capitalism versus communism remains to be the key political institution in America, with US and USSR government being the main and true organisations behind the continuing Cold War.…