Summary Of On Women's Right To Vote By Susan B Anthony

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As American women were continuously denied their constitutional right to vote, female author and advocate, Susan B. Anthony wrote her document, “On Womens Right to Vote”. This followed her daring act of disobedience as she cast an invalid vote as a female, leading to her imprisonment, which shadowed the very proponents of women in the United States. In her indignantly critical and cleverly crafted speech, given to her fellow citizens, Susan B. Anthony clearly articulates and logically argues her audience through the employment of repetition, parallelism, and sylogism to push towards change in her governmental system. Throughout Anthony's message, she rightfully pronounces and articulates her purpose as she commonly utilizes repetition. This can be seen as she …show more content…

This may also be seen as Anthony repeats the word “oligarchy” throughout the sixth paragraph. She begins by introducing the word with a highly negative connotation, phrasing it to exemplify the horror of her reality. After that she repeatedly connects the word to “sex”, “aristocracy”, “weath”, and “race”, divoulging in their odious identities. That repetition is used to induce ergency amongst her audience Gardner 2 which may be the catalyst for change. Furthermore, Anthony deploys a sense of logos or logical deductions throughout her writing to weaken the purpose and rightful application of her government actions. She directly uses syllogism to do so, in which Anthony states, “Are women persons?... Being a person. women are citizens.”. This quote directly invalidates the argument that women do not rightfully deserve suffrage, and establishes the purpose behind her argument. As she enacts this strategic language, she is not only successfully dismantling her opponents actions but she deliberately legitimizes her own; leaving only factual knowledge to judge her improprisonment and the wrongdoings of the United States

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