Antithesis In Letter From Birmingham Jail

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The archangel Metatron was nothing short of devoted to his cause. Centuries upon centuries ago, the scribe of Heaven told the stories of Earth, Paradise, and Perdition to the humans and ethereal beings who would listen; throughout this, his God insisted upon His supremacy, even reprimanding the scribe to assert His divine status. In a more recent era, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. inscribed a letter to emphasize the black community’s need for justice, prose heard by both believers and nonbelievers alike, much like that of the scribe Metatron. Utilizing devices such a parallelism, antithesis, and allusions, King’s Letter From a Birmingham Jail emphasized the realities of segregation in the South in ways the clergymen could understand. In this …show more content…

wrote his Letter from a Birmingham Jail with a more literary kind of antithesis to express the need for the fellowship of the black people and the white people. In the fourth paragraph, King made the statement, “Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice anywhere”; the marginalization of one group and their rights showed that other groups were willing to oppress one another, and this should have been seen as a threat (Letter from a Birmingham). Using this antithesis gave King the ability to tug at the clergymen’s heartstrings, as they at the very least advocated for their own justice and wanted it left untouched. Similarly, while elaborating on the need for justice, King wrote, “Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly” (Letter from a Birmingham Jail, paragraph four). Only those in the focus would feel the immediate shock, but all would feel the aftermath, and by turning the phrase on itself and telling that anything that harms one, harms all, King created a sense of urgency, for the clergy didn’t want the side effects of something that otherwise didn’t affect them. In another account of King attempting to show the need for change, he noted, “... Our beloved Southland has been bogged down in a tragic effort to live in monologue rather than dialogue” (Letter from a Birmingham Jail, paragraph ten). Many called the South home; however, the purported greatness of their homeland was only suffering due to the parochial views that caused the citizens to rather read their own soliloquies than participate in the drama unfolding before them. This carried much of an emotional effect, as King’s target audience consisted of southerners -- such a powerful statement had the ability to hit them close to home and truly open their eyes to the sins committed. By employing the use of antitheses, King was able to show the contrast between the different sides of the same moral coin and

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