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Next A Woman In Berlin Rhetorical Analysis

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Next, A Woman in Berlin used rhetoric to appeal to the targeted audience. For example, the text states, “‘Forgive me. It’s been so long since I had a woman.’ He shouldn’t have said that. Next thing I know I’m lying with my face in his lap sobbing and bawling and howling all the grief in my soul (Page 104).” This appeals to the audience’s pathos by evoking feelings of sympathy from them. At this point in the memoir, the author has been sexually assaulted an abundance of times and this has taken a severe emotional toll on her. The author is so used to being treated poorly by men that she is not used to being treated with kindness and respect; so when this man treats her like an actual human being, she is very touched. This is a feeling that mainly …show more content…

So, feminists will be more capable of understanding the irony to the boy’s request. Lastly, the text states, “After making these audacious declarations she would flash her black eyes, lift her hands, and appeal to us, ‘Girls, you better go and change the world. It needs it!’ We liked that. Because we didn’t think much of the world of 1930, either. In fact, we emphatically rejected it. Everything was so muddled, so full of barriers and obstacles (Page 138).” The rhetorical device used here is decorum because this statement appeals to the absolute core belief of being a feminist; female empowerment. The author realizes how unfair this world is to women and she wishes to defy its sexist standards and be the best she can be while changing the world. Determination and leadership are qualities that hold eminence to feminists. Therefore, it is evident that A Woman in Berlin uses rhetoric devices to apply to the values of feminists and liberals by evoking feelings of sympathy, mocking sexist double standards, and appealing to the feminist philosophy of female

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