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Rhetorical Analysis Of Martin Luther King's Letter To Birmingham Jail

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Trust the Reverend
3,446 black people were brutally lynched from 1882 to 1968. Lynchings were popular among white supremacists, and was only one of hundreds of discriminatory events black people faced. Martin Luther King Jr was a prominent figure in the push for equality. He wrote speeches, formed parades, and protested to end segregation. While confined in Birmingham Jail, King wrote a letter in response to white clergymen after they told him his actions for equality were untimely. The letter was published and it had an incredible effect: the clergymen chose to side with King. Although MLK exercises a plethora of rhetorical devices throughout the “Letter from Birmingham Jail”, logos, allusion, and ethos are the most powerful because they …show more content…

After mentioning the Supreme Court’s decision to outlaw segregation, his use of logos uncovers hypocritical laws: segregation was outlawed, yet whites proudly discriminated anyways and lynched innocent black people at will. MLK also exposed hypocrisy within a paragraph entailing his charge of parading without a permit: “there is nothing wrong with the ordinance… but when the ordinance is used to preserve segregation… then it becomes unjust” (2). King’s charge was unjust. Multiple times King applied for a permit, but after being denied every time, he paraded illegally. The law itself was fair, but it “preserved segregation” against black people, specifically MLK. King’s use of By alluding to St. Augustine and St. Thomas, King justified his logos-infused arguments, which stated that the actions of whites were cruel hypocrisy: “an unjust law is no law at all” and “is a human law that is not rooted in eternal and natural law” (2). The reference to catholic saints also inspired the clergymen to trust King. MLK was highly intelligent, and was very educated in Christianity and in laws, which was confirmed by his use of logos and religious

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