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Parallelism And Extended Metaphors In John F Kennedy Inaugural Address

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John F. Kennedy was a very successful speaker and president. The country was very segregated and going through major hardships. John made this speech after he discovered that he won the election. In his most renowned speech “Inaugural Address”, the 35th president uses parallelism and extended metaphors to persuade the audience throughout the speech. John’s speech “Inaugural Address” is a very well written and thought about speech. The speech talks about bring the country together and doing everything they can to benefit the country for the better. John also talks about how war will not be the first choice. At this time war was very frowned upon. This is why John F. Kennedy did as much as he could to stop the Cuban Missile Crisis from happening according to …show more content…

He used these rhetorical terms to hit people in a new way and provoke them to do more for their country. The first example of parallelism used in this speech is in the first paragraph. John F. Kennedy states “We observe today not a victory of party but a celebration of freedom, symbolizing an end as well as a beginning, signifying renewal as well as change.”. In this sentence he is talking about winning the election. Most people think of a president winning an election as a win for a presidential party like republican or democratic. John is stating in the first sentence of his speech that this is not the case, winning the election is a symbol of change and the start of a new era. Although the first paragraph. Has an example of parallelism the second paragraph does also. Instead in this case he is uses the word belief to install parallelism into the paragraph. John uses parallelism in this sentence “And yet the same revolutionary belief for which our forebears fought is still at issue around the globe, the belief that the right of man come not from the generosity of the state but from the hand of

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