80 PTS !!! MARKIN BRAINIEST !!! Read John F. Kennedy’s “City Upon a Hill" speech and answer these questions.


How does the author arrange the ideas?


How does the organization of the text fulfill the author's purpose?


How does the author appeal to logic and reason (logos) or emotion (pathos)?


What kinds of evidence—facts, anecdotes, analogies, allusions—does the author use?


How does the supporting evidence fulfill the purpose of the text?


Does the speech succeed in fulfilling the author's purpose or intentions?


What do the speech and the author's chosen strategies reveal about the culture that produced it?

Respuesta :

Answer:

The speech's ideas are arranged in a way of reminding the audience the importance of adherence and remaining together in spite of the evident shifts in the world structure due the international conflicts; using that context to fulfill the purpose of displaying his condolences to the people of Massachusetts and show sorrow for those who passed away, thus appealing to this emotional lever (pathos) to persuade the audience to be in conjunction and solidarity to make the world a better place; also bringing up reasoning on how ancestors were able to survive by overcoming harsh challenges (logos), pointing out previous wars and bigger racial conflicts of the past as evidence and mistakes we can now be aware of and knowledgeable about, which can be used as an opportunity to improve and make it better, therefore revealing the different levels of benefits for everyone that can be achieve if together we turn things around, in the construction of a more egalitarian society that makes the world a better home.

Explanation: