Analysis of Dr. King

             Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.
             King's use of rhetoric in "I Have a Dream" is one of persuasion, determination, and also at times, radicalism. The fundamental ideal that King orates is an outline of a country in which people of all races and religions would become unified, integrated, and equal. King wishes for immediate national action on the issue of segregation while asking people of the black community (and those with similar virtues) to harmonize and cooperate for a collective cause.
             Metaphors are key in addressing his speech. King uses metaphors and figurative language throughout his whole speech when conveying messages. He speaks of the "check" of constitutional rights to be "cashed" by the African Americans. King states that the American government had denied African Americans' rights by putting it into a metaphor, saying that there has been, "...a check which has come back marked "insufficient funds." King also strongly advocates nonviolence by stating, "Let us not seek to satisfy our thirst for freedom by drinking from the cup of bitterness and hatred."
             King addresses his speech not only to colored Americans, but also to those of the white community who had struggled beside the blacks in a search for domestic equality. He refers to whites as "our white brothers" who "have come to realized that their destiny is tied up with our destiny..." King implies that there will be a "biracial army" to "storm the battlements of injustice," meaning that people of all backgrounds in his audience will come together to fight discrimination. His reason for having had universal audience was so it would symbolize that everyone was in the fight for freedom together, that every American must fight for civic virtue.
             The last strategy used in the rhetoric is the idea of repetition. The most frequent ...

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