preview

Literary Analysis Of Still I Rise By Maya Angelou

Decent Essays

The poem “Still I Rise” was written by the African American poet, author, and civil rights activist, Maya Angelou. Maya Angelou was born in a time where she got to experience the civil rights movement. During this period of time, Black people were not being treated equally, and with this poem, Angelou is addressing White racist people who torment African Americans. As a civil rights activist, it is Angelou's job to fight for the rights of people. Angelou employs many literary devices in the poem, such as, simile, metaphor, and repetition to convey the reader that anybody has the strength to overcome discrimination and prejudice no matter one's race or gender.
Maya Angelou employs similes to demonstrate how she will not be disturbed because of others’ opinions about her. In the first stanza she says, “You may trod me in the very dirt, / But still, like dust, I'll rise” to make her oppressors know she feels very confident with herself (3-4). Angelou utilizes a simile to compare herself to dirt and then dust, the dirt represents how her oppressors include her in the lower class, which has no power to conquer their enemies, while the dust symbolizes her potential to succeed. With this comparison, Angelou makes the reader know she is strong-minded, and she does not care what others think about her. With a very confident tone, the author says, “Cause I laugh like I've got gold mines/Diggin’ in my own backyard”(19). This simile compares her laugh to gold mines, gold mines usually

Get Access