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    letter to birmingham

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    Patton November 25‚ 2013 Soc.9a.m “Letter From Birmingham Jail” by Martin Luther King‚ Jr. King spent eight days in his cell. During that time he composed his "Letter from a Birmingham Jail." The letter was ostensibly conceived in response to a letter that had recently run in a local newspaper‚ which had claimed that the protests were "unwise and untimely"; however‚ King also quite deliberately wrote his letter for a national audience. The letter reveals King’s strength as a rhetorician

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    right to legislate changes that they feel are necessary for the contentment of the entire society. What responsibilities does a virtuous citizen have to follow the law? Socrates in Plato’s “The Crito” and Martin Luther King‚ Jr. in his “Letter from Birmingham Jail” answer this question from a contradictory perception. According to “Crito” (399 BCE) Socrates declares that no matter what‚ it is his duty to follow the law of his city‚ Athens. However in King (1963)‚ St. Thomas Aquinas argues that “a

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    NOTES

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    Tyler Shields May 3‚ 2014 Analysis: “A Letter From Birmingham Jail” On April 16th‚ 1963‚ Martin Luther King Junior wrote one of the most memorable letters in the history of Civil Rights movement. He did so while being imprisoned in Alabama. On the fourth day of his incarceration‚ he produced the most beautiful prose I have ever read‚ in order to deliver a convincing and righteous message. Four days before the letter was written‚ King‚ and many other civil rights protestors‚ were arrested

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    Aspect of Human Experience

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    fought for equality. Some individuals employed the use of literature as a social commentary in their fight against injustice. “The Hanging of the Mouse‚” by Elizabeth Bishop‚ “The One Who Walk Away from Omelas‚” by Ursula Le Guin‚ and “Letter from Birmingham Jail‚” by Martin Luther King evoke emotions and appeal to the society’s sense of justice. The stories portray the theme of injustice and criticize the moral life of the American society. The writers employ different strategies to convey their

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    1849‚ Civil Disobedience‚ took transcendentalism and implemented into society. Thoreau’s civil acts were fundamental due to the fact that he did not integrate violence or fear. Thoreau’s defiant actions‚ involving governmental issues‚ landed him in jail because he refused to pay taxes. More than one hundred years later‚ in 1963‚ Dr. Martin Luther King Jr followed in Thoreau’s footsteps by participating in acts of civil disobedience in the Civil Rights Movement. The main goal of the Civil Rights Movement

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    Analysis: Martin Luther King’s “Letter from Birmingham Jail” In April of 1963 Martin Luther King was arrested during a nonviolent demonstration in Birmingham‚ Alabama. While incarcerated‚ he came across a public statement‚ “A Call for Unity” made by eight white clergymen in attempt to criticize his work and ideas. It was then that Martin Luther King wrote his rebuttal “Letter from Birmingham Jail”‚ using rhetorical appeals to not only under mind the clergymen’s statement‚ but their moral sense

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    when man disobeys the law and separates from the democratic society he feels has failed‚ he simply pushes democracy further towards failure. While the ends laid out by Thoreau in Walden and Civil Disobedience‚ and Martin Luther King Jr. in Letter From Birmingham Jail‚ may be completely valid‚ the mean by which they chose to try and attain them‚ civil disobedience‚ is acted upon without true understanding of its detrimental impact to democratic society according to Lewis H. Van Dusen. While Henry David

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    King: “Letter from Birmingham City Jail” (pp. 202-218) 1. Martin Luther King‚ Jr. distinguishes between just and unjust laws and believes that civil disobedience is sometimes warranted. Do you think Kyi agrees? Why or why not? 2. What current law or rule do you feel is unjust enough for you to peacefully disobey? How would you exercise civil disobedience? I feel that the laws for taxing senior citizens should be based on their revenue. Most seniors now these days have to work even while they are

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    one’s life experiences such as a group of individual’s possessing similar problems‚ ideas‚ and attitudes. One example in history that influenced these two forms of literature is the civil rights movement era. The written work known as “The Letter from Birmingham Jail” written by Martin Luther King Jr. was a direct result of one’s generation and human experience. The civil rights era also had a profound effect on the music being produced. This could be heard through the musical lyrics from influential

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    in the African-American Civil Rights Movement‚ did not aspire to the throne but to freedom and justice for the African-American community. In this context‚ he wrote Letter from Birmingham Jail which was addressed to the clergymen who had previously sent him a letter that criticized his protestations. This letter can be in some points compared to Machiavelli’s treatise. Those points are the notions of love and fear; that of integrity; and the notion of war. Is it better for

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