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

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How does MLK hold his audience accountable? Are there any concepts we’ve discussed this semester that apply? In his "Letter from Birmingham Jail," Martin Luther King Jr. confronts the lack of concern of his audience regarding racial injustice, thereby holding them accountable. He attacks the overall white community as well as moderate white clergy for their lack of active participation in the civil rights movement. According to King, their failure to act helps to maintain the systematic racism and oppression that African Americans experience. King also appealed to his audience's moral senses, urging them to acknowledge the seriousness of the civil rights movement and the importance of taking immediate action. He issues a challenge to them, urging them to speak up, give up on their complacency, and actively pursue equality and justice for all. A concept that we have discussed this semester that applies to this is dialogue and persuasion because in "Letter from Birmingham Jail," King combines dialogue and persuasion, challenging audience complacency towards racial injustice, holding them accountable. …show more content…

Weaver feels that all humans are 'born rhetoricians' who by nature desire to persuade and be persuaded. We all need, says Weaver, to have things pointed out to us, things stressed in our own interest. Monologue is most properly viewed as only one (although usually unethical and undesirable) species of persuasion; monologue, we would contend, should not be equated with all types of persuasion" (Johannesen et al. 59). This quote shows the importance of dialogue in communication as well as persuasion because it makes the case that persuasion is a normal part of human contact but stresses the significance of expressing ideas in a polite way, which is consistent with the strategy used by Martin Luther King Jr. in his "Letter from Birmingham

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