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Papers On More Historical Figures & Their Works
Page 26 of 42
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Martin Luther King Jr. and Frederick Douglass
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A 5 page paper which compares and contrasts Martin Luther King Jr. and Frederick Douglass. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: RAjrdu.rtf
Martin Luther King Jr. and Jonathan Swift
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A 4 page paper that discusses Martin Luther King Jr.’s Letter from Birmingham Jail and Jonathan Swift’s A Modest Proposal. The paper examines them separately. No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAkingwf.rtf
Martin Luther King Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement
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A 4 page paper that discusses Martin Luther King Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: RAmcrm.rtf
Martin Luther King Jr.: Civil Rights
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A 5 page paper which examines the various
conditions that seemed to call for a civil rights movement, wherein Martin Luther King Jr.
became involved, influencing many people and many conditions. Bibliography lists 10
sources.
Filename: RAmrtjr2.rtf
Martin Luther King Jr.: Non-Violence as an Effective Weapon
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A 5 page paper
which discusses how Martin Luther King Jr.'s approach to civil rights, utilizing
non-violence, was an effective weapon in making changes to civil rights involvement. The
paper also discusses how Jim Crow laws, Plessy v Ferguson, and Brown v Board of
Education also played into this approach. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Filename: RAkingnonv.wps
Martin Luther King Jr.’s Letter from Birmingham Jail: Emotional Appeal
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A 3 page paper which examines the emotional appeal of King in his Letter from Birmingham Jail. No additional sources cited.
Filename: RAbir5.rtf
Martin Luther King's "Letter From The Birmingham Jail" - Ethos, Logos & Pathos
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5 pages in length. Orators have a single objective: to persuade their audiences that what they have to say holds the greatest value and righteousness than any other opinion. As one of the nation's supreme wordsmiths, Martin Luther King, Jr. utilized his oratory talent as the conduit between racial inequity and the potential for building new cultural attitudes. His life cut short before realizing his dream, King nonetheless infused society with some of the most influential speeches whereby his use of ethos, logos and pathos worked in a synergistic fashion to both empower and persuade; "Letter from the Birmingham Jail" stands as the epitome of those efforts. Bibliography lists 3 sources.
Filename: TLCKingBirm.rtf
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