Susan B Anthony Essay

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A Women’s Right to Vote was a powerful speech delivered by Susan B. Anthony in the year 1873. We remember Anthony as a highly influential woman for her speeches dedicated to proving the rights of women everywhere, this influence still held power in her era. Anthony was a role model and inspired many like herself to speak out. In this particular speech, Susan B. Anthony strives to empower and persuade her fellow citizens, male and female, that by voting for women, they are not committing a crime, they are only exercising their rights. Susan B. Anthony can powerfully talk and persuade her audience by the means of quoting legal documents, using an assertive and urgent tone/diction, and using rhetorical questions. By using these strategies, in particular, Anthony sets herself up to recite an …show more content…

“We, the people of the United States, in order to form a more perfect union, establish justice, insure domestic tranquility, provide for the common defense, promote the general welfare, and secure the blessings of liberty to ourselves and our posterity, do ordain and establish this Constitution for the United States of America.” (Anthony Paragraph 2) This singular quote which Anthony chose to use, provides a great point of evidence for her claim. Anthony points out that when the Constitution mentions “We, the people” she reiterates that it doesn't disclose in the Constitution “We, the white male citizens”. By using this quote, it gives power to her argument of enabling women to vote. It isn't stated in the Constitution that we are to do otherwise. We have enabled the right to vote and are simply practicing that right to do so when Anthony “unlawfully voted”. The Constitution doesn't explicitly state that women are not allowed to vote, which she can use to prove her point that she is not just making up information about what is legal or

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