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Rhetorical Analysis Of Incidents In The Life Of A Slave Girl By Harriet Jacobs

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Most authors use many effective strategies in order to persuade or inform their readers of a specific topic. In this case, Harriet Jacobs uses many rhetorical strategies to highlight the significance of slavery and how most slaveholders abused their slaves with lies and physical harm. In Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl, Harriet Jacobs uses rhetorical strategies such as rhetorical questions,vivid dictions, and euphemism to inform these white Christian women from the north about the struggles a female slave goes through. During the passage, Harriet Jacobs asks specific rhetorical questions in order to put more emphasis on her passage. During the fourth paragraph, Harriet addresses the issue that some enslaved men have become …show more content…

She incorporates this strategy in order to provide her readers with an image. In the first paragraph, Harriet writes about how a slaveholder once told her about a slave who had run away to the north and how the slave," besought him to take her back to her master" (Lines 6-7). In the next paragraph, she then explains that this story was false and knew that one slave the slaveholder mentioned was her friend, and she found herself in comfortable circumstances. Another example of this could be found in paragraph seven in which she describes how, "One woman begged me (Harriet Jacobs) to get a newspaper and read it over." (Line 61). She uses vivid diction in this quote by including how the woman had begged her urgently to read her a newspaper that apparently covered a story on how black people who had sent word to the queen of America that they were all slaves. The third example of this strategy can be found in the beginning of paragraph four when she states that, "Some poor creatures have been so brutalized by the lash that they will sneak out of the way to give their masters free access to their wives and daughters" (Lines 28-29) She demystify that most black men have been so brutalized and abused by their masters that they even let them harm their own wives and children. Thus, Harriet Jacobs uses vivid diction in order to provide an imagery for her

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