SOAPS-tone Reading Strategy
For MLK Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” Speech
- Speaker
- Actual voice: MLK Jr.
- Middle-aged; African American; educated; articulate
- Experienced much racism and segregation himself
- Voice to be heard: minorities in the U.S., especially African Americans
- Impoverished; segregated; subject of much racism and abuse
- Felt much of the brunt of propaganda, Jim Crow Laws, and years of slavery in the South
- Occasion
- Setting (time and Place)
- Time: 1863
- Height of Civil Rights movement; dawn of the Vietnam War
- Current president: John F. Kennedy
- JFK was assassinated and shared many similarities to Abraham Lincoln, the guy who began MLR Jr.’s dream by abolishing slavery.
- Place: Washington D.C.
- The nation’s capital
- Symbolizes that this message is important to the entire nation (unity)
- Ideas: Key idea (premise): “All men are created equal.”
- Segregation does not produce equality.
- The nation will not truly be free under racial segregation.
- Audience
- Intended audience (those who are supposed to hear): the entire U.S.
- Extremely diverse; very populous; vast
- Spread out; many different beliefs
- Receptive audience (targeted audience: those who must hear): the southern U.S.
- Premise: minorities are inferior to whites; they’re not human/citizens.
- Very bitter and resentful because of the Civil War and the economic effects of the abolishment of slavery
- Violent; a deep culture of propaganda that made them embrace negative ideas about minorities
- Purpose
- Persuasion: to persuade southern whites to believe that “All men are created equal and to abolish segregation and Jim Crow laws.
- The audience should think that this is an urgent matter; if change doesn’t happen through nonviolent means, violence will likely prevail.
- Subject
- Main idea
- First list key topics
- Topics: segregation; racial inequality; racism; Jim Crow laws; national unity; freedom
- Main idea: If segregation and racial inequality are not eliminated, the U.S. will never be a truly free and unified nation.
- The text is describing a problem
- Key problem: racial inequality and segregation
- Key words and phrases: His repeated “I Have a Dream!” shows what life will be like if the problem is fixed.
- Tone
- Tone: the writer’s attitude
- Tone words:
- Allusive: several allusions to Lincoln and his Gettysburg Address, to the Arthurian legend, to the Bible, to the Declaration of Independence, and to the Constitution.
- Urgent: he maintains that if the voices of minorities are not heard today, trouble will soon follow.
- Concerned/hopeful: He is concerned about the future of his children, but he is hopeful through the repeated “I have a dream today.”
- Syntax (structure of sentences)
- Lengthy
- Much repetition
- Many parallel structures
- Very formal and reminiscent of older speeches