Why I Want A Wife Analysis

Words: 851
Pages: 4

Who does not want a so-called “wife” that would do everything for you? Would not everyone want someone to do the dishes for them, make meals for them, do their laundry, and take care of their kids? However, would that be considered too much work for the wife? Judy Brady elaborates on this thought throughout her essay “Why I Want a Wife”- she uses three main rhetorical devices to help develop her essay. Brady wonders why husbands are always looking for a wife, then she starts to think what kind of wife she would want and comes up with many quality reasons. By using ethos, logos, and pathos, Brady makes her essay stronger and uses those devices to connect with readers of Ms. Magazine to try and explain what kind of wife she would want and make the claim that wives do too much for their husbands. Surprisingly, the strongest device that Brady uses is ethos. By using ethos, it not only allows her to connect with readers, but also to establish …show more content…
In every paragraph, Brady says something that connects her to her readers- “... who will not bother me with rambling complaints” nobody wants to listen to complaints, and wives know how it feels to always have to listen to everyone(229). Brady uses that statement to let readers feel like they are the same person. The readers ‘feel the pain’ and understand where Brady is coming from. Another way Brady uses pathos is the tone she uses throughout her essay. At the very end of her essay, she sarcastically says “My God, who wouldn’t want a wife?” (230). She leaves readers with a question to suspend judgement-Brady does not want readers to abhor her essay. She is writing for a magazine, so she needs to make sure people are fond of her essay. The ending question makes the readers think of why they would not want someone just like them- soon they realize they do too much for their