Rhetorical Devices In Mlk Letter From Birmingham Jail

540 Words2 Pages

Martin Luther King was arrested in Birmingham, Alabama, on April 16, 1963. He was arrested for protesting without a license. Martin Luther King wrote a letter while in jail in response to the clergymen stating that he no longer wanted and waited to be heard. While writing his letter, Martin Luther King uses his claims, rhetorical devices, and sources to develop his argument. The most well known civil rights activist and president of the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. King is not an outsider, he is president of the source he was in office there. King wants to fight for freedom. "Injustice" anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. King was invited to have an organizational ties who lives inside the United States can never be considered an outsider anywhere within its bounds. Birmingham asked them to be on call to engage in a nonviolent. King wanted to try to answer the statement in what he hopes will be patient and reasonable terms. What the king is meaning by this is he is wanting to spread peaceful protest around like Paul did the gospel. He also uses the interrelatedness of America. In the letter he states, "Moreover, I am cognizant of the interrelatedness of all communities and states." What King means by this is we are all one country and nobody is an outsider. King says a kind of social analysis that deals merely with effects and does not underlying causes. …show more content…

Dr. King emphasizes that nonviolent direct action is necessary to bring about social change and address the racial inequality and injustice faced by African Americans. King submits to his own natural that an individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust. Because he degreed freedom today because Socrates practiced civil

Open Document