Rhetorical Precis For In Cold Blood

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In Cold Blood Rhetorical Analysis Essay The cunning nonfiction novel ‘In Cold Blood’ by Truman Capote is a whirl of emotions. He manipulates the reader into feeling pathos for the killers, because he wants you to feel guilty. Capote is trying to make a point that the Criminal Justice System is flawed, and that the death penalty was unfair and unjustly. In pages 107-109, Dick and Perry’s relationship is starting to show flaws. Perry is starting to feel guilty, and Dick is starting to fear him. In Cold Blood will leave the reader in pain and guilt by the way that Capote makes you feel Pathos for Perry’s bad childhood and anger for Dick’s cold, cold heart. The reader is drawn into Dick and Perry’s second day of Mexico as the two have …show more content…

A dusty road winding into and out of a white and dusty village.” And while Dick and Perry are enjoying their picnic, the two’s relationship is beginning to spiral downhill. Perry feels as if there must be something wrong with them, while Dick is feeling as sane as can be. In the beginning, Capote makes the reader stop and think about the scenery. The way Capote says it makes the reader visualize mountains, hawks that are wheeling in the white sky. (Which we can imagine as maybe it's cloudy.) The roads of Mexico are dusty, which can mean that it’s a dirt road. The dusty village could also make you think the foundation of the village is dirt. Although Capote wants to drive pathos for both Perry and Dick into our skulls, most of the readers feel more drawn to Perry. As I state in my thesis, Capote is trying to make us feel pathos for the killers to make us understand why the Justice System is so flawed; and how these killers were mentally ill, but failed by the Justice System. And that the Justice System could’ve probably rehabilitated them instead of executing them. Furthering my thesis, the death penalty is also unjustly and unfair to these mentally illed criminals. Despite everything Perry has done, being the one out of …show more content…

Capote’s way of making the reader question the criminal justice system and the death penalty is bizarre. Capote makes us feel pathos for Perry Smith and builds tension and uniquely uses imagery and detailed exploration of the characters to make us understand. It’s like we’re overseers and we experience what Dick and Perry’s journey was like on the run. To feel what they felt, to understand why they were treated so poorly and why they shouldn’t have been hung. That maybe deep down there was a chance these two could have been redeemed as human beings again and that they overuse the death penalty instead of trying to help the criminals reform

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