Caged Bird Sings Racism

706 Words2 Pages

In the autobiography I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings, Maya Angelou explains how, even at a young age, she was affected by racism and segregation. These actions were a result of her being a young black girl in the South during the 1930s and later on in California during the 1940s. In the beginning, Maya and her brother, Bailey Jr, are sent off the Arkansas to live with their grandmother, who they call Momma. By the end, Maya is 16, living in San Francisco with her mother, Vivian, and has a child of her own. The hardest thing she had to overcome was being raped at the age of eight by Mr. Freeman, Vivian’s boyfriend, which caused her to go mute for five years of her life. All in all, Maya can be described as insecure, lost, and intelligent. Throughout the book, Maya is very insecure about her looks, and even gets made fun of for them. She believes that because of the strong racism at the time, blonde hair and white skin is beautiful, and that she is a fat black girl trapped in a nightmare. As Maya got older, she had to face personal incidents of racism, such as a white man’s speech at her eighth-grade graduation, where he said blacks are not intelligent, and the …show more content…

She did well in school and was very responsible. Also, at the age of five, she fell deeply in love with William Shakespeare’s writing, even though he was a white male. She claimed that reading what he wrote put her in “a state in which [she] felt [herself] most familiar.” What she meant was that she felt most comfortable with herself when she read Shakespeare. Reading helped Maya to ignore what was happening around her, and be happy for a short amount of time. As Maya got older, her love for books grew. Not only did she use them to get away from the world, but also to understand it better. Her love of book changed her from just a reader, into a writer and poet too. Now, Maya’s book help other girls around the world to feel the way that she did when she

Open Document