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Maya Angelou

Decent Essays

‘Still I Rise’ is a poem written by Maya Angelou, an African-American poet, and civil rights activist in the 1960s. She has struggled at many times in her life; when her parents divorced at the age of three, being raped by her mother’s boyfriend just after moving back to live with them, and refusing to speak for five years because she felt guilty for reporting the crime. The poem portrays an ironic response towards people who have persistently put her down, due to the fact that she is now overcoming this, and is most likely having a better current life than her last oppressors. The reader can comprehend Angelou’s strength to continuously fight her battles against subjugation towards her and others of the same race and gender. The basis of …show more content…

“You may write me down in history….You may trod me in the very dirt. But still, like dust, I’ll rise.” This quote indicates Angelou’s thoughts and emotions of what she and other victims of oppression faced, and how she overcame this. This personal pronoun helps the listener recognise that this issue has affected Angelou and that it is personal to her, but she will continue to persevere. In contrast to this, in ‘Disabled’, Owen describes how he was trapped in a dark world after his injury, and couldn’t rise above the suffering that he faced. “Waiting for dark” portrays how physically unable Owen was. After losing his leg, it seemed as if all he did was wait for the dark to come so he could sleep. He had lost all happiness in his life, and was left in utter despair, just waiting for his life to finally relinquish. Owen shows the reader how he allowed society to depress and overthrow him, which contradicts Angelou’s view on facing hardship. Using omniscient narration in this poem enables the reader to know how Owen felt when he was struggling, and gives a deep insight into the hardships that he faced, that would be hard to discern if the poem was told in first or second perspective. Strong imagery is used in ‘Still I Rise’, which creates a contrast between Angelou’s past struggles, and her present life. Many imagery

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