Rhetorical Devices In Letter From Birmingham Jail

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Martin Luther King, was the most well known civil rights activist and president of the Southern Church Community. He was arrested in Birmingham, Alabama, on April 16th, 1963. He was arrested for protesting without a license. Martin Luther King wrote a letter while in prison in response to the Clergymen stating that he no longer wanted to sit and wait to be heard. While writing his letter, Martin Luther King uses his rhetorical devices and sources to develop his argument that coming to Birmingham is not "unwise and untimely". When King arrived in Birmingham, he was thought of an outsider since he did not live in the town. But his words through Ethos proved them wrong, as he proved to them with statistics on why he was not. He explains to them that he was president of a ministry, so he also uses biblical terms to explain to people, almost like comparing. How he portrays the reason he is there is by claiming ”Just as …show more content…

He is talking about how the colored community is getting tired of the courts ruling on the situation. Nevertheless, the author asks a rhetorical question to the clergy regarding this discrepancy, and concludes that there are both unjust and just laws. He argues that negroes must obey just laws because it is morally right, and for the same reason, must disobey unjust laws. MLK then concludes with a quote from St. Augustine that says, “an unjust law is no law at all”. He uses St. Augustine for Ethos, since he is a powerful man, and the king believes that he can help him get his point across more

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