Rhetorical Devices In Fdr's Inaugural Speech

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“Franklin D. Roosevelt Inaugural Address” Analysis This paper is an analysis of the inaugural address of the former president Franklin D. Roosevelt (FDR). We will focus on the main historical events that were happening, and how he addressed those issues in his speech. In his speech he used appeals to grow closer to the crowd he was speaking too. We will state the quotes he used and announce what kind of appeal that it is from. FDR uses words and phrases to pull the crowd in and I will discuss the effects of those words and what they had on the crowd. Finally we will talk about the overall quality and effectiveness of the speech and how it was such a great speech used. First there were many historical events happening in 1933 when FDR was elected president. For instance, in 1929 the stock market crashed and we were going through a depression. This day was called black tuesday. FDR explains that the people should not fear the stock …show more content…

The quotes will have an emotional, ethical or logical appeal meaning that could be heartfelt, or they could be down to the bone and real with their statement. In one quote from his inaugural address “the only thing we have to fear is fear itself…” Notably this quote appeals to ethical. Reason being is that it tells from right and wrong. The moral of this quote is to tell us we will be alright and “the withered leaves of industrial enterprise lie on every side…” Moreover this quote appeals to emotional. The quote is meant to tell us about how we have no industry and no goods are being made. The words chosen “withered leaves” Pulls at heartstrings making it an emotional appeal. “Our greatest primary task is to put people to work. This is no unsolvable problem if we face it wisely and courageously.” Ultimately this quote appeals to logical it states exactly the problem and that we need to fix it. It gave the fact of what's wrong and the assumption about how we can fix

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