Monday, August 19, 2019
Literature: Tool For The Masses To Grasp And Form Opinions On A Subject :: essays research papers
 Literature: Tool For The Masses to Grasp and Form Opinions on A Subject    Over the centuries, one of the most important tools available to protesting  groups was literature. Some of the most famous protest literature in the world  has its roots in American history. For example, some great American authors of  protest literature include Thomas Paine, Thomas Nast, John C. Calhoun, and  Martin Luther King. Through eloquent, sometimes subtle means, these authors  became the spokesmen for their particular protest movements.    Thomas Paine was an English-born man who seemed to stir controversy wherever he  traveled. Paine's forceful yet eloquent prose made him a hero for the three  great causes to which he devoted his life; the American Revolution, religious  reform, and the natural rights of man. At the age of 37, Paine strove for the  fabled shores of America, determined to forget his past. He made the  acquaintance of Benjamin Franklin, and settled in Philadelphia. There, Paine  was eventually hired into the profession of editor for the Pennsylvania Magazine.  He published a series of minor essays, but his first important work was an  essay written for the Pennsylvania Journal in which Paine openly denounced  slavery. This was Paine's first foray into the world of protest literature, and  it clearly whet his appetite. Paine soon became fascinated with the ongoing  hostility in Anglo-American relations, and, much to the dismay of his publisher,  could not seem to think of anything but. Therefore, in late 1775, Paine had  begun what was to become a 50-page Pamphlet known as Common Sense. In this work,  Paine stated that:    Society in every state is a blessing, but Government, even in its best state, is  but a necessary evil; in its worst state an intolerable one: for when we suffer,  or are exposed to the same miseries by a Government, which we might expect in a  country without Government, our calamity is heightened by reflecting that we  furnish the means by which we suffer. Government, like dress, is the badge of  lost innocence; the palaces of kings are built upon the ruins of the bowers of  paradise (Fast 6).    This very biting and controversial stance is what characterized Paine's writing.  He went on to dismiss the King as a fool, and stated that natural ability is not  necessarily related to heredity. Paine argued that the colonies existed only  for British profit, and that the colonies must unite quickly if they were ever  to form a single nation. This latter argument was more than likely influenced  by Franklin's famous "Join or Die" cartoon. Finally, Paine argued that the only  way to gain the rights desired by the colonists and help from outside powers was    					    
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