Letter From Birmingham Jail Analysis

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Nearly every writer on the philosophy of civil rights activist Martin Luther King, Jr., makes a connection between Dr. King and Henry David Thoreau, usually via Thoreau’s famous essay, Civil Disobedience (1849). In his book Stride Toward Freedom (1958), King even states that Thoreau’s essay was his first experience with the idea of passive resistance to governmental laws perceived as unjust. Thoreau was a subscriber to the theory of transcendentalism, which in its simplest form is described as trusting individual intuition and thinking independently, and King was heavily influenced by this idea. In his essay Letter from Birmingham Jail, King further explores these ideas of passive resistance and mixes them with his urgency for swift justice. …show more content…

King writes to his readers about the injustices faced by African Americans, in particular. He appeals to his readers' emotions in order to persuade them to take steps to end segregation. This emotional appeal, coupled with his hope for independence, distinguishes him and his writing from Thoreau who focuses on the unjust American government. As he chastises his readers for upholding unjust laws, Thoreau speaks to them in a troubled, irritated tone. Thoreau's essay differs from King's in that he presents several objectives. He not only describes the government's unjust policies, but he also instructs his readers about how and why to riot, coming across as an anarchist in some ways. He also voices his opinions on government overreach in a way that King does not. In the very first sentence of Civil Disobedience, he says “I heartily accept the motto, “That government is best which governs least;”...Carried out, it finally amounts to this, which I also believe, “That government is best which governs not at all;” (Thoreau). This quote displays another difference between King and Thoreau, mainly that King was not focused on lessening government power like Thoreau was, but rather having the government use its power to create a more just society. King wouldn’t have agreed with other aspects of Thoreau’s philosophy, one of these differences being Thoreau’s eventual acceptance of violence as a form of protest. Another significant difference that separated King from Thoreau was how he justified what was morally correct. King believed that a law that is just should be in line with the moral law or the law of God, basically showing that laws should pertain to the laws of the Bible. Thoreau, on the other hand, was far less focused on this and wasn’t trying to prove what laws should be changed, but rather which ones

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