I Have A Dream Rhetorical Analysis

784 Words2 Pages

We all have heard of Martin Luther King Jrs speech “I Have A Dream”,, unless you perhaps live under a rock. This powerful speech will be broken down and analyzed by myself in the next few pages to really dive deeper into how beautifully this was written. The speech was given prior to the March on Washington, a peaceful protest about human equality for African Americans at one of the largest civil rights movement in history. Over 250,000 people stood before MLK jr. in Washington, D.C. at this rally according to CNN.com. This civil rights leader played a huge part in ending the segregation for African Americans and helping inspire the Civil Rights Act of 1964. His rhetoric language left an impact on America. Through his use of appeals, tropes, schemes, and propaganda techniques, he influenced Americans to believe in the phrase “all men are created equal”. …show more content…

Starting with such rhetoric to get the crowd interested, he then creates a source. This speech was about freedom and he emphasizes that it was freedom for all slaves, however 100 years later, they are still not free. His confidence throughout is rock solid. He then channels everyone by referencing the Emancipation Proclamation that was given by President Lincoln to officially free slaves in the United States during the Civil War. This immediately gives MLK some credibility. Next, Martin luther king jr starts out his speech with the confidence I wish to show in every single one of my speeches. “I am happy to join with you today in what will go down in history as the greatest demonstration for freedom in the history of our nation.” So right from the get go we have an idea where this speech is

Open Document