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John F Kennedy Inaugural Address 1961. Speaker. John F Kennedy Youngest and 1 st Catholic President Had a large position he had to pull during the Cold War. Purpose. Improve relations with Soviet Union Stop the development of nuclear war Stop the spread of communism (secretively)
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Speaker • John F Kennedy • Youngest and 1st Catholic President • Had a large position he had to pull during the Cold War
Purpose • Improve relations with Soviet Union • Stop the development of nuclear war • Stop the spread of communism (secretively) • Gain the respect and support of the nation
Audience • USSR (stop the development of nuclear war) • US at the Capitol (red scare) • The world (stop the spread of communism)
Medium • Shown over television • Heard over the radio • Millions of people heard the speech even from other nations • Due to government restrictions within the Soviet Union those in USSR did not view it
Rhetorical Appeals • Ethos ( credibility of speaker) • Page1 • JFK respectfully acknowledges all the prominent and average citizens at his inauguration. (paragraph 1) • Kennedy speaks of the oath he took as well as our forefather. (paragraph 2)
Promises the world that he will do whatever it takes to help each nation a high level of freedom. (paragraph 5 and 6) • Pathos (emotional appeal) • Page 1 • Our hands have the power of great destruction and the ability to solve problems. (paragraph 3)
“Heir of that first nation”….”Let the word go forth from this time a place” (paragraph 4) Page 2 • Soviet Union and US are wasting money and time on making weapons to destroy all life. (paragraph 5) Page 3 • Now we as Americans have a call to service and our nations final success and failures lies within our generations. (paragraph 1)
Protect our nation from war and battle all common struggles. (paragraph 2) • Not many other generations have the opportunity to serve their nation in its greatest time of need. (paragraph 4) • Logos (reason) • Page 1 • We will preserve freedom by having all the free nations unite. (paragraph 7 and 8)
Page 2 • Not just going to provide freedom to these new developing nations in order to prevent the spread of communism. (paragraph 1 and 2) • Message to the Soviet Union saying that we need to pursue peace. (paragraph 4)
JFK shows negotiating as civilized progress towards our goals instead of a weakness. (paragraph 7) • JFK speaks of how we must not look at our differences but instead learn to solve the common problems that are present in our societies. • Nuclear regulatory committees • Freedom throughout the world for every single individual. (paragraph 8-12)
Rhetorical Devices • Anaphora • Antimetabole • Hyperbole • Kenning • Rhetorical Questions • Allusion • Asyndeton • Polysyndeton