Joe Weiler Dr. Ripley College Reading and Writing 03/21/17 The Call-Out of the White Man: Rhetorical Analysis of Susan B. Anthony’s Speech After Being Convicted of Voting Susan B. Anthony was one of the biggest leaders of the women’s rights movement because many men during the 19th century believed that women were not strong or smart enough to vote in government elections which is why women were not granted suffrage until August 18th, 1920. In Anthony’s speech that she gave in 1872, after being accused of voting in the presidential election, she argues that all of American citizens should have the right to vote and not just the white man. Anthony’s speech made several logical, ethical and emotional appeals which is what made her empowering and memorable speech set the tone for the women’s rights movement for decades to come. In her speech, Anthony starts off by reciting the preamble of the Federal Constitution. She then adds, …show more content…
Anthony’s speech made several logical, ethical and emotional appeals which is what made her empowering and memorable speech set the tone for the women’s rights movement for decades to come. By stating the preamble of the Federal Constitution she built her credibility because it is reputable and it is a document that we built our country on. She effectively relies on the founding fathers and other esteemed members of society to help support her claims. She was able to logically express and correlate that anyone who is born in the united states is a citizen and that every citizen has the right to vote. Instead of just saying that women should have rights they do not have and making an argument, she states that the United States Constitution already guarantees her and other women the right to vote. She is able to carefully evaluate whom falls in the boundaries of American citizenship. Anthony is able to connect American democracy ideals with the reality of the unequal situation going on in our country at the
“before the Civil War, Anthony campaigned hard for the American Anti-Slavery Society, and during the war, she helped establish the Women’s Loyalty League to lobby for a constitutional amendment that would abolish slavery and guarantee civil and political rights for all Americans. Yet, despite her lifelong commitment to black rights, after the war, Anthony opposed both the wording of the Fourteenth Amendment because it inserted the word “male” in reference to citizen’s rights,” (Bilhartz) An article mentioned how Susan believed that all American citizens should be treated equally and not judged based on things that they cannot control. In her hope to change the way that Americans are treated the fourteenth amendment was passed but Anthony was still not satisfied. In the original fourteenth amendment, the word male was used. Anthony fighting for women's rights disputed this, her fight against the non gender-equal words used in the amendment was valid.
At Susan B. Anthony's funeral in 1906, Anna Howard Shaw delivered a eulogy that paid tribute to Anthony's life and legacy as a champion for women's rights. In her speech, Shaw employs a variety of rhetorical devices to convey the message that Anthony's cause of women's rights is a universal cause. One of the rhetorical devices Shaw uses is metaphor. She begins the eulogy by describing the grief and gratitude felt by those in attendance. Shaw says, "Your flags at half-mast tell of a nation's loss, but there are no symbols and no words which can tell the love and sorrow which fill our hearts.
Susan B. Anthony Kha Hoang Su17 HIST 02W Hist of US 1812 To 1914 August 5, 2017 Section I: Background Susan B. Anthony is arguably considered to be one of America’s most significant women’s rights activist, as well as a social reformer. This is because she is most notable for her contributions to the women's suffrage movement. Along with suffrage, Anthony fought for a number of women's rights as well, including women's property rights, the natural rights of mothers, and women's right to an education at colleges and universities. Not everyone can understand the hardships she endured in order to guarantee the equality for women in terms of both civil and political rights, but her efforts were indeed rewarded with many triumph in achieving equal
To start off, in the first paragraph, Susan B Anthony introduces her topic. She speaks on the woman right to vote and explains she has been charged for the crime of voting. To support that voting as a woman should not be a crime, she uses the national constitution as evidence. “It shall be my work this evening to prove to you that in thus voting, I not only
Anthony a significant woman is that she started the National Woman's Rights convention , she started serving on the business committee and spoke on the necessity of the dissemination of printed matter on women's rights . .This was an annual meeting which means they met every year and they met on the early women's right movements in the United States . Speeches were given on the subjects like wages , education , career opportunities , and women's property rights . These speeches gave hope to all women and they gave hope to Susan B. Anthony who gave them because she finally thought they had a chance it getting equality . After Anthony giving speeches and going to conventions she was soon elected and awarded president of the NWSA in 1849 when she returned to her hometown in Rochester , New York .
She helped to organize several marches and protests against the voting laws that disqualified women from voting. Anthony and many other women registered to vote when the movement was underway. Not expecting to be accepted, she planned to sue the state for not letting her vote, as women were still prohibited from doing so. However, her registration slipped through the cracks and was accepted, so she voted. She and fourteen other women were incarcerated under the accusations that they voted unlawfully and underwent rigorous trials while being held in prison.
Woman Suffrage Women's right activist, Carrie Catt, in her speech, “Address to Congress on Women’s Suffrage”, explains how woman suffrage in inevitable. Catt’s purpose is to convince Congress that it is time for woman suffrage. She adopts a confident tone , uses direct quotations, and appeals to logos in order to convince Congress that it is time for woman suffrage. A confident tone is adopted by Catt throughout her entire speech to congress. Catt opens with “Woman suffrage is inevitable.”
She says, that women need to be independent to be equal and with that “men need to let women be equal”. Anthony uses logos in her speech. She uses the constitution to back up her opinion. She cites the preamble and refers to the words of Webster, Worcester, and Bouvier to help prove to people that women are humans and therefore should be able to
Many speeches were given to help them gain their right. Susan B. Anthony gave speeches so that it would help them gain the support they needed for their journey. She did this to prove to women that they were not going to be taken seriously unless they prove that they can, which was getting that right for them. In 1872 Susan started doing things by herself. She went to vote illegally for the presidential election
This obviously shows she is on the side of women's rights in her argument and again, quoting the Declaration of Independence, gives her the quality of formality using lines from a piece that dear to American
People remember this has a great speech because what she represents in this speech is hope, gratefulness, and guidance. Also the rhetorical devices she uses makes the speech that much more personal. Her use of an apostrophe or using an imaginary person was a great addition to the speech. She stats “ where after all do universal human rights begin? In a small places, close to home, so close and so small that they cannot be seen on any maps of the world of the individual person; the individual person; the neighborhood he lives in; the school or college he attends”(adoption).
“Until woman has obtained ‘that right protective of all other rights -- the ballot,’ this agitation must still go on, absorbing the time and the energy of our best and strongest,” wrote Susan B. Anthony as she fought to equalize the rights of different genders. Susan B. Anthony is a woman known for her many accomplishments in her life. She has influenced both abolitionists and suffragists, as well as those who wanted to protect children. Daring and bold, Susan B. Anthony created a lasting impact to women and slaves alike. From her early life, Anthony was exposed to more knowledge and learning capabilities than most other women in her time period.
For a very long time, the voting rights of the citizens have been a problem in the US. It started out with only men with land being able to vote, and then expanded to white men, and then to all men. However, women were never in the situation, they were disregarded and believed to not be worthy enough to have the same rights as men. They were essentially being treated as property, therefore having no rights. But, in Susan B. Anthony’s speech, she hits upon the point that women are just as righteous as men.
Hillary Rodham Clinton delivered her speech “Women’s Rights are Human Rights” September 5, 1995 while speaking at the United Nations Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing, China with the intent to educate and spread awareness in regards to the rights and treatment of women around the world, while encouraging women to take initiative and highlight the potential women have if presented with the opportunity of equality. Early in Clinton’s speech, she uses the power of ethos to establish her credibility and continues to build upon it throughout, bringing attention to the fact she has had years of experience fighting for change among people of all kinds. Clinton convinces listeners that she has made women’s rights a priority in her life
Susan B. Anthony, a woman who was arrested for illegally voting in the president election of 1872, in her “On Women's Right to Vote” speech, argues that women deserve to be treated as citizens of America and be able to vote and have all the rights that white males in America have. She begins by introducing her purpose, then provides evidence of how women are citizens of America, not just males by using the preamble of the Constitution, then goes on about the how this problem has became a big problem and occurs in every home in the nation, and finally states that women deserve rights because the discrimination against them is not valid because the laws and constitutions give rights to every CITIZEN in America. Anthony purpose is to make the woman of America realize that the treatment and limitations that hold them back are not correct because they are citizens and they deserve to be treated like one. She adopts a expressive and confident tone to encourage and light the hearts of American woman. To make her speech effective, she incorporates ethos in her speech to support her claims and reasons.