January 1, 1871
Susan B. Anthony, in her address “as a representative of the working women,” argued that men should recognize women’s legal right to vote in America.
Susan B. Anthony, in her address “as a representative of the working women,” argued that men should recognize women’s legal right to vote in America.
The president of the Working Women’s Central Association
used antithesis in the beginning of the speech to outline injustices in double
standards among men and women.
Susan B. Anthony (photo credit) |
Antithesis, the use of contrasting situations, allows for a logos
appeal to be made to an audience. The argument being made, that if men have a
right to vote then women should also, is harder to refute when made obvious the
social and political unfairness.
“It is because of a false theory having been in the minds of the human family for ages that woman is born to be supported by man and to accept such circumstances as he chooses to accord to her,” Anthony said. “She not like him is not allowed to control her own circumstances. The pride of every man is that he is free to carve out his own destiny. A woman has no such pride.”
Anthony also uses rhetorical question to refute the preconceived
counterarguments to women gaining the right to vote.
“Nowhere can woman hold head offices and the reason is this, politicians can’t afford to give an office to one who can’t pay back in votes,” Anthony said. “If in New York the women could decide the fate of elections, don’t you think they could afford to make women County Clerks or Surrogate Clerks or even Surrogate Judges?”
By using a
question with an obvious answer, Anthony forces the audience to recognize the
flaw in the argument that women cannot be in office because they cannot
bring in votes. She argues that
more women with the right to vote allows for a better campaigning opportunity
for those hoping to hold office, rather than an hindrance to the cause.
This use of question allows Anthony to transition her
arguments to the politician’s need for women’s votes to gain the support of the
working class.
“No political party can hope for success and oppose the interests of the working class. You can all see that neither of the great parties dated to put a plank in the platform directly opposed. Both wrote a paragraph on finance, but nobody knew what it meant,” Anthony said. “They did this not because of a desire to do justice to the workingwomen, but simply because of the power of the working men to do them harm.”
This
argument subtly suggests that women have more power to do damage than is
currently known, instilling fear in the audience in a non-aggressive way.
Anthony
finally falls back to rhetorical question, asking women to recognize the
possibility that men are less inclined to protect women as a whole, and more
inclined to protect their wives, daughters, mothers, and sisters as their “property.”
The use of
rhetorical question throughout is successful because it implies that all of the
tough questions have obvious answers. This strategy allows for women to look at
the big picture as a question with a sure answer:
1. Will women gain the right to
vote? Yes.
2. Should you join the cause to earn
it? Yes.