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    King I Have a Dream Speech” - American Rhetoric‚ explains the history of the United States is littered with prejudice‚ discrimination‚ stereotype‚ etc and as results civil rights activists have long battles the social inequalities by colored people also known as African Americans. This article demonstrates the psychological factors used in this article‚ the most common psychological factors included: prejudice and stereotype viewed throughout this article “Martin Luther King I Have a Dream Speech”

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    it became a known issue that the country would work towards fixing. Kings “I Have a Dream” speech is one of the most memorable speeches of all time and possibly one of the most successful speeches; it made America into what it is today. This speech cost Martin Luther King his life‚ but also mastered the art of persuasion successfully. By Martin Luther King using the rhetorical appeals Pathos and Ethos in his “I Have a Dream” speech‚ he persuaded the audience that discrimination is wrong. On August

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    famously known for his "I have a dream" speech‚ which he delivered during his March on Washington in 1963. In the third paragraph of this well-known speech‚ King acknowledges the unwavering shadow that still lingers over "the Negro" in society. King’s credibility is impregnable as he has lived through the difficulties that he speaks of and has been witness to them happening to others. As a "Negro" himself‚ King’s words hold genuine and fierce meaning for all those that have been victim to segregation

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    To further analyze Martin Luther King Jr’s “I have a dream” speech‚ one must understand the context of the 1960’s as well as the events leading up to the march on Washington. Two years prior to the March on Washington‚ newly elected President John F. Kennedy spoke to the American people at his inaugural address: “We dare not forget today that we are the heirs of that first revolution…the torch has been passed to a new generation of Americans.” This new generation of Americans protested materialism

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    The two themes in the texts‚ “I Have A Dream” by Martin Luther King‚ and “Let America Be America Again” by Langston Hughes were both directed to the conflicts in that period of time. Although they are very similar‚ they also differ. In Martin Luther King’s‚ “ I Have A Dream” he talks more about African Americans and how their rights are different from whites just because of their skin color. While in Langston Hughes poem he talks about immigrants‚ African Americans‚ Native Americans‚ and poor people

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    Martin Luther King Jr’s “I Have a Dream” speech was made in the March On Washington. MLK Jr. emphasizes the importance of the passing of the bill and equal rights to all people by using nonviolent protests as he mentions it in his speech. To help his audience understand his goal‚ Martin Luther King Jr. had used a variety of literary devices. This includes metaphors‚ similes‚ anaphores‚ and allusions. This great significance in his speech makes his speech the best out of John Lewis’s “Patience is

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    The Power of Words Plato once described rhetoric as the‚ “art of enchanting the soul.” When I read Martin Luther Kings’ I Have A Dream speech‚ the power of his words stayed with me. His use of simple compelling words such as; exile‚ brotherhood‚ freedom‚ dream‚ and now show he knew how to connect with America. King spoke with such electricity and power‚ yet was able to control the mood of his listeners. One powerful phrase that reflects the emotional state of America in 1963 is‚ “One hundred

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    and reviewing the CAT scans‚ Dr. Chen realized that the tumor was inoperable and she had to tell the family the tragic news. “I had these kinds of conversations in the past and could only imagine how difficult it would be for this patient and his daughter. I wanted to be compassionate with them‚ to take the time to listen and to acknowledge their fears and concerns. But I also did not want to open the floodgates of emotion on an afternoon when the waiting room was overflowing” (Chen 1). In the end

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    In the prominent “I Have a Dream” speech‚ Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. prophesied the reality of our present: “One hundred years later‚ the life of the Negro is still sadly crippled by the manacles of segregation and the chains of discrimination.” Fifty more years of suffrage‚ pain‚ and deceit would be waved into the African American culture. You are a shackle being dragged through the trenches of a prolonging oppression. Learning about the suffrage individuals go through has taught me to appreciate

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    Luther King became the pastor of the Dexter Avenue Baptist Church in Montgomery Alabama. As Prof. Baldwin from the magazine religious and ethics stated about King “He was able to connect with the spirituality of the people there in Montgomery‚ and I think that’s very‚ very important when you want to pastor people if you want to lead people in a social movement.” (Baldwin 2). After the events that happened on December the 1st 1955‚ where Rosa Parks was arrested in Montgomery Alabama for refusing

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