American journalist Clare Boothe Luce writes a speech to the Women’s National Press Club about how the press sacrifices sensationalist stories. Luce’s introduction talks about how the American press is wrong and how she tries to address the problem. She starts off by tells the other journalist how she is happy, but the audience makes her unhappy and challenged. This shows her hard work in writing and how the press lacks in writing true stories.
In the beginning of the speech, she addresses to the audience that she will tell the American press about the truth. Luce criticizes how the media write false stories and get full credit for it. She states that “I stand here at this rostrum invited to throw rocks at you. You have asked me to tell you what’s wrong with you -American press” (5-7). She wants her audience to have some background information about what they write. By using ethos and logos, her audience is going to take the feedback because Luce knows her audience. Her audience sees how she uses logical and ethical appeal to state her claim to the journalist in the room. These devices show that the journalist is being told what they do wrong and how they should try to fix it. She tries to weaker her audience and points out how they sacrifice and criticize sensationalist stories. When she wrote this speech, the time period was 1960 which means she wanted to address the problem sooner than later. When the audience sees and hears this it makes them
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She states many of her opinions on how the press should stop telling and spreading false events and ideas in the newspaper. When given the chance she tells her audience journalist about how the American press about her feels and how she feels challenged by them. Overall, the beginning of her speech tells the audience how she is going to state information and how they should listen to
I feel like her aim was for every single person in the audience and she wanted them to know what African-American women go through on daily basis. She wanted everyone to feel the pain and why the violence against African-American women go unnoticed in the media politics and many more. This documentary is the advocacy of
Transition. Clara didn’t let her age or resources get in the way of her goals. She earned her own money to pay for her books by sewing and writing letters for neighbor who didn’t know how to read or write.
Luce begins the speech with a lighthearted, humorous tone. This tone helps to set her apart from the audience, as seen when she says, “I ask you only to remember you asked for it!” The humorous tone also helps to persuade the audience into trusting Luce and feel more relaxed and open to listening to her words, which also appeals ethos, “The delicate art of giving an audience hell is always one best left to the
Knowing that the audience connects to the press, since they are all journalists, bashing their industry as a whole will cause change. This persuasion technique causes emotion inflicted because of the statement being so broad, without any exceptions.From the quote used at the beginning of the essay, Archetype is also seen. Some journalists may view meaning of the press to not tell the truth, but bring entertainment in news. Not every person thinks press speaks about truth, like Luce, in fact press has a reputation for having false and dramatic stories. Luce uses both devices for one thing, to bring change. With the audience emotional and against her stereotype with the press, change will happen to better the system in the end. After all, the room full of journalists spoken to might see the press as a perfect system. With hundreds of stories and news to keep the people informed, press does promote mass communication. Before the press minimal communication resulted because there was not a way for people across the world to know what was going on. Press is a milestone in communications and eventually led to more advanced systems like the computer and cell phones. Luce evokes the audience to feel passionate about the business they work in and determination to not let the press die, since Clare states that the place press appears to be in represents negativity.
Stating “speaker that criticizes the weaknesses” and acknowledging that she doesn’t expect an “enthusiastic response” or a “friendly” response. She shows the audience what she expects and makes it clear that she isn’t trying to be the audience’s friend, but rather their teacher. Luce wants to restore integrity into the system and wants to teach them how to do this. It’s an effective choice because people generally dislike being told how to do something, so she informs the audience that they aren’t going to like her. This works well because she approaches it from the audience's point of view.
Luce begins her speech by expressing her happiness and excitement for being invited to be the guest of honor at the Women’s National Press Club. Expressing her happiness, she says she is “flattered and “challenged by the opportunity to give her speech. However, as she continues her introduction by repeating her introductory statement she alters it by saying that she is “less happy” and “more challenged” than one might know. The slight change in her statement prepares her audience for something that they may view as unpleasant, so that they do not feel shocked about what they are about to hear. Not only is Clare Luce able to subtly communicate with her audience but she is also able to provide signs that can help them better understand her purpose. Additionally, in order to remind the audience that they asked for her opinion, Luce states that she did not offer to give the speech rather she says “you asked for it,” reminding the audience that her opinion and critique is exactly what they requested. The repetition of the nature of her speech allows Luce to confirm that her audience is clear about her intentions with the speech that she is about to give.
Knowing this, she takes her experience and uses it to write this piece and uses it to spread her message and her feelings toward the topic.
Through Truth’s numerous rhetorical questions used in this speech, she has made a strong impact on her audience. Each question either precedes or follows a strong truth. By questioning herself, and being able to answer each question, Truth shows her understanding of society, and the mistreatment of women. She never wanted the audience to answer her questions, because the honest answers should be obvious.All of her hardships as a slave, and she is a women. When discussing intellect, she even asks, “What’s that got to do with women’s rights or negroes rights?” Her rhetorical questions were a unique way of bringing up obvious points, and forced her listeners to fill in the answers themselves. It would have grabbed their
Kelley does not stay in that mode for too long, in fact she continues to make shifts between various forms of discourse to perform a different purpose. The next mode that she uses is that of narration. This particular mode is extremely effective in this speech to pull at the heartstrings of her audience. Which is clearly evident in
Her speech was mostly drawn from her experience of racism, racial injustice and poor treatment of women when she lived in the South. Her belief in the ending of these injustices was based on her religion and belief in Christianity and then natural rights of all individuals. Her motives to write the speech was based on changing the thinking of other people into acknowledging that all humans were equal despite their race, gender or ideologies. They were therefore supposed to be treated as the same irrespective of their social classes. Some of her personal details could have influenced the speech that she wrote. Among them is gender since she was a woman and her beliefs in Christianity through reading the Bible that championed that all people were the same
To read of Nellie Bly, one would come to think the woman a pioneer in journalism; a hero for women's rights; and an American icon. These beliefs would be true if not for the fact that Bly was so much more. She was much more a woman, much more a writer, much more a hero and much more than most could ever be. Bly not only took on a world of injustice and stereotypes, but conquered it and changed the way the field of journalism works today.
From the beginning she pulls the readers attention, she uses a metaphor “Eventually being perfect day after day, year after year, became like always carrying a backpack filled with bricks on my back”(Quindlen, 296). This metaphor is the most significant part of her speech as she continues to refer to this metaphor throughout the speech. She uses this for the purpose of appealing to the audience in a meaningful, and personal way, creating a connection between her and the audience as most students, not only college students, can probably relate to the feeling of being heavily put down by something , not necessarily what she is talking about. Her use of pathos is what makes the speech so appealing and interesting, because she makes it so relatable and easy to understand.
That both genders have common ground as people. She goes on to describe how society is becoming more progressive, that whether or not people want to admit it, changes are coming and as time goes on women will be granted more equality. This change was already being seen but just needed further progression.
This appeals to the rhetorical strategy ethos. This helps pull the reader's attention in and makes them believe the claims she is making. Having first hand accounts of this experience allows her article to connect with the readers so they know what she has gone through. The audience can see the author's credibility through this making it more believable. Showing us her side of the story lets us know that these problems are real. Explaining to the audience examples of this in everyday life and language makes the audience feel like something must be done.
This is a speech that can be classified as a political text. It has autobiographical overtones as the author is living in first person what she refers to in her words. This speech was delivered in Hartford (Connecticut) on November 13, 1913.