What strategy is sojourner truth using in this passage?
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Heads up! Apex shuffles the order of answers to be annoying (in my opinion). and the answer is
Ethos, to establish her credibility as both a slave and a woman
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Strategy is sojourner truth using in this passage
- An ardent supporter of abolition, temperance, civil rights, and women's rights in the nineteenth century, Sojourner Truth was a former slave. Her contributions to the Civil War won her a meeting with President Abraham Lincoln in 1864.
- She changed her identity to Sojourner Truth and set out on a mission to preach the gospel and speak out against slavery and tyranny in 1843 because she felt it was her religious duty to do so.
- She persisted in her support of racial and gender equality after President Lincoln's Emancipation Proclamation. In Washington, D.C., she advocated for desegregating the streetcar system. She also requested land grants from Congress for freed slaves as a first step toward independence and the abolition of indentured servitude.
- "Ain't I a Woman?" by Sojourner Truth, one of the most well-known abolitionist and women's rights speeches in American history, was delivered during the 1851 Women's Rights Convention in Akron, Ohio. Throughout and after the Civil War, she remained a vocal advocate for women's and African American's rights.
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