A Rhetorical Analysis Of Full Circle By James Mcbride

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The article Full Circle, by James McBride, is about his detailed observations of key areas in Dakar, Senegal. He uses his own experience from America to form a dominant view to reinforce his validity in his statements. This leads to his main point to fully take root that hardships have always inspired music and that rap/hip-hop, “It all comes home to Africa”. Rap has always been a genre used to show self-expression and “Rap doesn’t belong to the American culture, it belongs here. It has always existed here, because of our pain and the hardships and our suffering.” Everyone not just American readers, need to know that rap is a way for any person in any culture to show their outrage towards something and for people to express that outrage to the world. Because, Rap is a dream to a better life. You can see this by how Tupac Shakur’s picture hangs at the market stalls throughout Dakar. However, McBride uses many other descriptions of different areas near or in the city to illustrate his point. Such as him going into detail about Hotel Teranga, “a fortress, packed behind a concrete wall where beggars gather at the front gate. “ This is a place where tourists go and they “sidle through downtown Dakar like royalty” that gives a resemblance to the 1950s Birmingham, Alabama. Black people serving the “royalty” while …show more content…

But, it also shows the segregation and the poverty of the Dakarians with the tourists. He probably was originally going to make it strictly spatially when he was initially arriving to find the origins of hip-hop, instead he found a poverty stricken society where people are having to use rap as an outlet for their suffering. The people of Dakar believe that rap is a chance to a better life or at least a way to show their outrages throughout the