It was in Burma‚ a sodden morning of the rains. A sickly light‚ like yellow tinfoil‚ was slanting over the high walls into the jail yard. We were waiting outside the condemned cells‚ a row of sheds fronted with double bars‚ like small animal cages. Each cell measured about ten feet by ten and was quite bare within except for a plank bed and a pot of drinking water. In some of them brown silent men were squatting at the inner bars‚ with their blankets draped round them. These were the condemned
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Oppressed feelings: No longer Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was incarcerated after fighting for his rights in a nonviolent peaceful protest to fight‚ exercising the first amendment of the Bill of Rights‚ and the Freedom of speech; an automatic given for those who do not consist of colored skin. In response‚ Dr. King wrote a powerful letter to the “genuine” clergymen announcing his strong opinions and beliefs toward segregation‚ discrimination‚ and racism. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. executed such an overwhelming
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King’s use of rhetorical tools helps him convince the clergymen to take a second look at how African Americans are being treated. King utilizes emotive language to target his audience’s emotions. For example‚ he states‚ “if you would watch them push and curse old Negro women and young Negro” (3). He then goes on to give more examples‚ including‚ “I don’t believe you would have so warmly commended the police force if you had seen its angry and violent dogs literally biting six unarmed‚ nonviolent
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Baldwin and King apply first-person narratives‚ allowing the audience to experience an immediate encounter toward the authors situation at the time. Baldwin starts the essay with my father died. This short but poignant sentence not only sets the tone for the whole story‚ but also engages the audience to share his despair‚ hatred and relief. Similarly‚ Kings holograph sounds professional and convincing because his first-person defense clearly reasons why his nonviolent protest is necessary through
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Martin Luther King Jr. was a well articulated man who was full of genuine knowledge about the world and his people. In his letter “Letter from Birmingham Jail” he justifies civil disobedience as an answer to social injustice. In hope to convince the clergymen who questioned his movement‚ King Jr. forms many strong arguments using rhetorical devices such as metaphoric relations and allusions. Social injustice and unjust laws was an important component of King’s letter. He argues that breaking an
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A Modest Proposal and the Letter from Birmingham Jail are both written by two men who were trying to make life better for their people. Martin Luther King Jr. and Jonathan Swift have well educated Christian Clergymen who fell victim to an oppression of their people. Being well educated they were both knew what they were talking when writing to the given audience. Among those similarities‚ there are also differences between the writings and the men themselves. Swift’s purpose of his written was to
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by outsiders…” In this quote‚ from the third paragraph of the letter written by eight Alabama clergymen‚ the term outsiders is used. Early on‚ this creates a label for Martin Luther King‚ outsider. Throughout his Letter From Birmingham Jail‚ King is able appeal to ethos in order to refute his title of “outsider” and generate a connection with his audiences‚ the clergymen and the people of America. King is able to do such a thing by alluding to multiple passages from the Bible as well as the figures
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In the readings Civil Disobedience and the Letter From Birmingham Jail‚ by Henry David Thoreau and Dr. Martin Luther King‚ they both focus on the matter of civil disobedience and the right of which every individual person should know that is it morally right to disobey laws that are unjust‚ and should be willing to face the aftermath of consequences. They both argue that the society that we live in would be a better place and of one unity if the citizens would know the difference between the concept
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Rosa Park’s refusal to give up her seat on the bus and Martin Luther King Jr.’s penning of “A Letter from Birmingham Jail” helped catapult the civil rights movement into action because their peaceful defiances of laws brought national attention to the injustice the government imposed on them without allowing violence to rationalize their punishments
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Yadata Osman Dr. Robinson Survey of Philosophy of Thought 11/30/2015 Paper 2 Throughout history‚ there have been many unjust laws. Many people obey laws just because they are laws. People often disagree with certain laws‚ but they follow it because it’s socially and normally acceptable or because it’s just the law. I believe that King wrote the Letter from Birmingham Jail to make his readers question and interpret whether or not a law is just. In this essay I will make the distinction between just
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