A Rhetorical Analysis Of President Obama's Speech

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President Obama's Speech Analysis President Obama gave a speech on the twenty-seventh of May twenty-sixteen. The president spoke at the Hiroshima Peace Memorial in Hiroshima, Japan at five forty-five pm Japanese standard time. The audience consisted of the Hibakusha, the survivors, of the Hiroshima bombing and the entire world. It was broadcasted around the world through television so everyone could see what was happening at the memorial. Mr. Obama was there to apologize on behalf of America for our Country's past wrong doings and speaking of the two nations coming together as one individual. Some important points he had made in his speech, is of the questions he asks. His way of examining the deaths of war and its point. He speaks of the ultimate causes and what happens in the end. The information given is when the president said, "... mourn the dead, including over 100,000 in Japanese men, women, and children; thousand of Koreans; a dozen Americans held prisoner." Mr. Obama spoke it all in a formal and somber way. To show respect and honor for the responsibility of reaching out. …show more content…

The way it was constructed to start with a beginning as of using death and power in the same paragraph, to end in the way of unification. He uses different phrases of saying, "efficient killing machines." Giving it a sense of parallel structure and time for you, as a moral person, to think about the issues at hand. The vocabulary was as formal as the nations expect of the leader of a country. The president even had more effect on the sentence structure, pausing long enough for translations to translate. Being short but effective with working

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