Hello, we are Kyle Albornoz, Justin Song, and Morgan Epps. We are currently undergraduate students attending the University of Maryland, College Park that are studying rhetorical analysis. During the 1960’s, the United States experienced many different important events that would forever change our history as we see it. However, we felt that the most important event was the Vietnam War. The 1960’s was the heart of the Vietnam War, as the war began in 1955 and ended in 1975. Although the war caused mass protests to happen all throughout the nation, many people had “anti-war” feelings and wished to remain peaceful in their protests, which is what our group ultimately decided to focus on. Different types of protests against the war could be seen through marches and the media, but our group examined two specific pieces of protests. In order to examine the anti-war feelings of the 1960’s, our group chose to dissect the song “I Ain’t Marching Anymore” by musical artist Phil Ochs, and the sermon “It’s a Dark Day in Our Nation” by Civil Rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King. Jr. Both the song and sermon address the previous notion that violence is the key to solving political problems, and thereby challenges people to not simply comply with this previous idea, but rather seek an alternate means of conflict resolution.
Upon choosing our works, we chose people who come from completely different backgrounds, but who share the same ideals. Phil Ochs is a famous, white male musician, as well as an advocate against the war. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was more renowned as a civil rights activist with an African American background, but he also was an anti-war advocate. Both of these men use all three appeals in order to strengthen their works, MLK uses all three very well, while Ochs focuses on pathos and logos primarily. Our blog examines the use of these appeals in strong detail with our own use of pathos and logos to strengthen our findings. The two works point to the concept that war should cease to exist, but along with the push for the end of war, MLK goes more in depth to explain the issue of race along with the war. The point where these two works coincide the most is through their target listeners and their specific mission. While they both want the whole nation to listen, primarily they target the United States government in order to make real change. Both these men work on platforms that allow them to accrue a large audience. Music, in the case of Ochs, provides the opportunity for the nation to listen because radio broadcasting can play songs at the push of the button. Dr. King was so admired, and revered that when he spoke, people automatically listen. With these platforms the two men were able to spread the message that war was not the solution, but only an addition to the conflicts at hand.
Our blog was structured to examine all the rhetorical appeals in these works, in order to understand the works main ideas. To make our blog effective for the reader, first we identified the key points being argued by Ochs and MLK. From there we moved on to not only analyze the rhetorical appeals in both works, but we also gave our own opinion in the form of our interpretation of the key rhetorical appeals of both the speech and the song. The first appeal we focused on was the kairos of each work as well as stating the stasis theory in both works in order to establish a base to move forward from. Next we explored the ways that ethos and pathos were implemented into both works. This allowed us to understand the kairos deeper, along with the reasoning behind the ideals provided by Ochs and MLK. Our blog strives to connect and reflect on these two pieces in a way that causes our audience to more deeply understand why these men said what they said. Our interpretations of the text, and the appeals in the text provoke our audience to think about the text in a different way than simply reading or listening. As you read our blog, we hope that you will agree, disagree, but mainly think about what makes these effective works of their time, and in the present day. Enjoy!