Please do a 400 word discussion answering the following questions. I don't want a title page and don't site references. Just a 400 word discussion.
1. First, how did the Indian Removal plans/policies emerge based on this week and last week's materials?
2. Next, please rhetorically analyze Andrew Jackson’s speeches (inaugural and second annual message.) How would you analyze the overall language/tone Jackson uses in his speeches? How does his language/tone change with each speech? Who is his intended audience in each speech, and what are his goals regarding dealings with American Indian tribes? What kind of patterns or trajectory do you notice?
3. After, please rhetorically analyze Andrew Jackson's" Letter to the Cherokee". What about the tone, intended audience, and purpose in the letter? What were some key quotes/parts that stood out to you, and why?
4. Lastly, what aspects of the chapter "Jackson's White Republic" stood out to you? What, in your opinion, was a key passage or quote, and why? What are your overall thoughts/reactions to this week’s materials?
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4p2959.html
http://avalon.law.yale.edu/19th_century/jackson1.a...
http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/aia/part4/4h3437t.html
https://www.gilderlehrman.org/sites/default/files/...
After this discussion please respond to this student's discussion down below in 200 words: these are some guiding questions for the response:
1) What similar points did your peer bring up that you also brought up in your initial post?
2) What points did your peer bring up that differed from what you discussed?
3) How did your peer's post or perspective change/enrich/enlighten your thinking about a particular week's materials?
4) What areas could you elaborate on for your peer? Can you expand on what they are saying by bringing up your own experiences or share related materials/connections to materials from previous modules?
Please respond to this student in 200 words, use the questions above to guide you:
Based on the material from the past two weeks, the Indian Removal policies emerged primarily due to Native resistance to Jackson’s attempt to assimilate them into American culture. Jackson realized the Indians would not listen to him so he called for them to exchange their tribal lands in the east for non-inhabited lands in the west.