I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings By Maya Angelou

544 Words2 Pages

The fight between the fight and the low accusation on the black race go hand and hand. Remembering her own childhood, the writer tells us how she and her older brother, Bailey, grew up in a town in Arkansas. The center of their lives was Grandmother and Uncle Willie’s store, a gathering place for the black community. On the night when this story takes place, Joe Louis, the “Brown Bomber” and the hero of his people, defends his heavyweight boxing title against a white contender. Maya Angelou’s telling of the event both entertains us and explains what it was like to be an African American in a certain time and place. “Champion of the World” is the nineteenth chapter in “I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings”. Maya Angelou continues using distinctive …show more content…

The primary sentence is a profound case to show the enthusiasm of the gathered group by saying, "The last inch of room was filled, yet people continued wedging themselves along the dividers of the Store." This exhibits the passion the population had and how this basic boxing match was truly important to them. Nearing the completion of the fight, the gathering listening can't choose the champ until the point that Joe himself talks into the referee starts counting toward the completion of the fight. Angelou makes an astonishing visual as to the emotions of the champ, Joe Louis, and telling about the emotions the gathering had a brief timeframe later when the group acknowledges and celebrates “the strongest man in the world”. Maya Angelou’s “Champion of the World” comes from her autobiography “I Know Why the Cage Bird Sings”. She writes about how oppression of the African American community is being defeated slowly and that the boxing match in her uncle’s shop was just the

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