I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings Maya Angelou Summary

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Wineburg astutely notes that "History offers a storehouse of complex and rich problems, not unlike those that confront us daily in the real world. Examining these problems requires an interpretive acumen that extends beyond the 'locate information in the text ' skills that dominate many school tasks." (51) By being given the challenge of recognizing and combating natural psychological tendencies towards presentism and ethnocentrism, as well as the challenge of comprehending and analyzing complex and diverse historical sources, biased points of view, cultures, contexts, and historical ramifications, students are encouraged and supported in developing the reasoning skills and patience needed to accurately listen, analyze, empathize, interpret, make evidence-based …show more content…

Through her individual experiences, we learn much about the collective condition of people in that era of American history. While Wineburg (5) talked about “the tension that underlies each encounter with the past: The tension with the familiar and the strange, between feelings of proximity and feelings of distance in relation to the people we seek to understand,” this book explicitly contained a remarkable mix of those tensions. Race, violence, segregation, historically and culturally influenced ideations hang heavy and ever-present throughout the book and are juxtaposed with multiple familiar scenes and childhood feelings that students can more easily relate to. When presented with institutionalized racism, racist actions, and bigoted mindsets that strikingly conflict with our modern moral sense of equity and justice, we are compelled to engage in historical thinking and empathy in effort to contextualize each character’s rationales and make sense of an era remarkably different than our

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