Today, most would think that all humans have equal rights. Unfortunately, though, women are still not treated as equal as men. Women do not get paid as much as men do, they are expected to stay home and take care of the children, and they do not have as many job opportunities as men do. All of this is in spite of the fact that women have been fighting for their rights in this country since the 1800s. Two of the most widely known speeches are “Ain’t I a Woman” and “Speech at Seneca Falls Convention.” Sojourner Truth, author of “Ain’t I a Woman,” and Elizabeth Cady Stanton author of “Speech at Seneca Falls Convention,” use multiple rhetorical devices to convey the message that women should have equal rights. To begin, both authors use repetition in their speeches to convey the message that women should have equal rights. An example of repetition in “Ain’t I a Woman,” is, “And ain’t I a woman?” Sojourner repeats this throughout her speech to say that she is a woman and she can do the …show more content…
An example of allusion in “Ain’t I a Woman,” is, “If the first woman God ever made was strong enough to turn the world upside down all alone, these women together ought to be able to turn it back, and get it right side up again.” Truth uses this in her speech to convey that a woman can do anything she wants without a man. She is, also, saying that women are powerful by themselves. An example of allusion in “Speech at Seneca Falls Convention,” is, “to protest against a form of government existing without the consent of the governed- to declare our right to be free as man is free, to be represented in the government which we are taxed to support…” Stanton uses this allusion to The Declaration of Independence to show that the people have power and that the government only works when the people want it to. Both authors use these examples to relate to
Susan B. Anthony's, "On Women's Right to Vote" speech was a historically significant oration that justified her position on women's suffrage. She establishes a proper, authoritative tone by citing government based documents, appealing to women's feelings of exclusion, and creating a logical argument through the use of many rhetorical strategies. Anthony references authoritative documents, such as the Preamble of the Constitution, to imply the abuse of the word 'we' in the document through the use of ethos. She states, "the people; not we" (Anthony 3) and, "nor yet we, the male citizens" (Anthony 3) alluding to the form of the word use " 'we' " (Anthony 2) in the Preamble of the Constitution. She indicates that the people are not a union and point out that women are just merely an irrelevant piece of the whole.
Sojourner truth is seen as a voice to many people. While many people stayed quiet, Sojourner was strong and stood up for equality. In her speech she states, “I could work as much and eat as much as a man- when I could get it- and bear the lash as well.” This is showing how she believes that she is a strong as a man and that she would be able to be treated as one and endure the same. In her speech she says that white women are seen as delicate flowers, while African American woman aren’t.
The central idea for “Woman’s right to Suffrage,” is men and women should be treated equal. Woman can do just as much as what men can do, woman should be treated like people and like we matter cause honestly we do. “Woman’s right to the Suffrage” Susan B. Anthony is most compelling because she uses solid legal evidence.
She acknowledges that to get her point across she would need to be very clear in what she was proclaiming. Like before, she knows that men will not see her word as equal to theirs. So repeating important parts of her speech would help to emphasize her poing. To give an example, in promoting her side of the argument, she repeats the word “we.” She says “We the people; not we, the white male citizen; nor yet we, the male citizens; but we, the whole people...”
Throughout our country’s history individuals have come together to fight for a better life in the future. Advocates for human rights such as Elizabeth Cady Stanton, Frederick Douglass, and Langston Hughes have been motivating readers everywhere. Motivation to change comes from feeling such as oppression, misery, and both freedom and liberty together. To begin with, Elizabeth Cady Stanton in 1848 summoned the first Women’s Rights conference with her speech “Declaration of Sentiments” to campaign that women have been oppressed by being denied basic human rights such as the right to vote, own property, and be equal under the law. For example, “The history of mankind is a history of repeated injuries and usurpations on the part of man towards women, having in direct object the establishment of an absolute tyranny over her.
Elizabeth Stanton was a female abolitionist in the mid-1800s America, who created the speech ‘Declaration of Sentiments’ that argues for the rights of women. The speech was ineffective despite the use of allusions because it didn't have much of an effect till decades after. Stanton uses an allusion for the entirety of her speech, since most people would have known of the declaration of independence at this time, people would be able to understand the significance of this speech by it alluding to such an important piece of US history. She uses “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all men are created equal” and inputs women alongside men, having it read as “We hold these truths to be self-evident that all man and women are created
Given that women had not yet gained the right to vote, this negative value of contemporary American society sparked a different, more protesting style of literature, as seen in speeches such as Sojourner Truth's Ain't I A Woman. Truth’s speech was also altered by Frances Gage, who changed it to make it seem more authentic to the audience. In her attempt to authenticate the speech to the public, she ended up changing the speech so much that she created a stereotypical image of Sojourner Truth. Throughout Truth’s original speech she states “Through God who created him and woman who bore him. Man, where is your part” (Truth 1851)?
(reason 1 oppression) If you look at Sojourner Truth’s (a ohia women that lived in 1851) speech “Ain’t I a woman” it gives a insight on how oppression can motivate people to change. (reason ½) If you look in Sojourner Truth’s speech, you can find in paragraph 2, signs of oppression and its willingness for change, grow. “Women need to be helped into carriages and lifted over ditches….. Nobody ever helps me into carriages and lifted over ditches, or gives me any best place.
Belma Mujezinovic Professor Dersch SPCM 1040 OA S1 2023 Public Speaking February 26, 2023 Critical Speech Review Introduction Sojourner Truth presented the speech "Ain't I a Woman" at the Women's Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio, in 1851. (Truth, 1851). The speech was a forceful and significant call to action, arguing for women's rights and confronting gender and racial disparities in American culture at the time. Truth spoke passionately about the need for women to be considered equals and to have the same rights as men. She believed that women were just as capable as males and should be allowed to vote and hold public office.
Florence Kelley, a former reformer for women and child labor, successfully conveys her message of immoral child labor laws across America within her speech to the National American Women’s Suffrage Association by using many different rhetorical strategies to highlight her key points and ideas. Kelley uses lengthy and concise syntax, anaphora, logical appeal, and emotional appeal in order to improve and strengthen her message conveyed in her speech. Throughout her speech, Kelley uses varieties of syntax to inform and emphasize her points to the audience. Kelley uses her knowledge of the subject of matter to her advantage by starting her speech off by using long sentences to inform and describe to her readers of the situation at hand.
During the Progressive Era, women began reforms to address social, political, and economic issues within society. Some addressed the issues with education, healthcare, and political corruption. Others worked to raise wages and improve work conditions. Among these (women) is Carrie Chapman Catt, a leader of the women’s suffrage movement. Beginning her career as a national women’s rights activist in 1890, she was asked to address Congress about the proposed suffrage amendment shortly after two years.
For example Anthony says, “but this oligarchy of sex, which makes father, brothers, husband, sons, the oligarchs over the mother and sisters, the wife and daughters, of every household” This is very sad since women and girls should not be ruled or told what to do because they are thought of to be less than man. The constitution is in place to have a unified country not to have an oligarchy of men lead households. The pathos appeal is used to show what suffering women are going through due to men ruling them, and not knowing how to fight back. Susan B. Anthony in her speech also says, “Are women persons?.....and no state has the right to make a law, or to enforce an old law, that shall abridge their privileges and immunities.”, which also connects with the emotions of the audience. She is trying to make people feel bad that women are treated less even though they are just as righteous as men to have the same privileges.
Both “On Surrender at Bear Claw Mountain, 1877” by Chief Joseph and “On Women’s Right to Vote” by Susan B. Anthony are captivating speeches on the oppression of the two groups by the American Government, one on Indian relocation and suppressing their culture, and the other on women’s suffrage. In Chief Joseph's speech, he mainly applies pathos to his argument to convince General Howard and his people on why they are surrendering and create a strong emotional appeal. Susan B. Anthony however mainly utilizes logos to make her impassioned argument to convince both men and women on why women should have the right to vote and get them to stand up and support her cause. First of all, in Chief Joseph's speech, he uses pathos to get an emotional appeal from both his people and General Howard. “It is cold and we have no blankets.
Writer and women's rights activist, Elizabeth Cady Stanton, in her speech, “Solitude of Self”, elucidates why women have a right to individual liberty and equality. Stanton's purpose is to impress the idea that every person is primarily an individual unlike any other human who has ever lived and whose rights must be treated individually and not in relation to gender or career. She adopts a remonstrative tone in order to arouse a sense of guilt and accountability in her male listeners. Stanton begins her speech with an appeal to logic. She summarizes her purpose, and by describing the individuality of each person as “our Protestant idea”, she creates common ground between herself and her audience.
We all know that women didn 't have as many rights as men, and they still don 't. Women can now do more than they used to, but they still aren 't equal with men. They have had to fight for so many things like the right to vote and to be equal to men. The 19th amendment, the one that gave women the right to vote, brought us a big step closer. The Equal Rights Movement also gave us the chance to have as many rights as men. Women have always stayed home, cleaned the house, and didn 't even get an education.