Maya Angelou Personification

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Maya Angelou, born Marguerite Johnson in 1928, was an African-American author, poet, and civil rights activist. Born in St.Louis, Missouri and raised in the racist southern state of Alabama, Angelou as a young girl experienced firsthand racial prejudice, and she had many difficult experiences that led her into having strong emotions against racism and sexism. At seven years old, Angelou was raped by her mother’s boyfriend and, as a result, she lost the will to speak. Also during this time period, segregation was common in majority of the states. After hearing Martin Luther King Jr., Angelou was drawn into the civil right’s movement which would help her make a difference by And to pursue this further, the issue of sexism was drawn to attention …show more content…

In the exposition the struggling woman opens saying,”You may trod me in the very dirt But still/ like dust/ I’ll rise”(3-5) The struggling woman being troded like dirt is similar to the idiom “walk all over”, meaning she is treated without respect by ignorant people. However; her saying,” like dust I’ll rise” means she will not let that defeat her. In the middle of the poem, she uses personification and a simile to help the reader sympathize, exclaiming, “You may kill me with your hatefulness/ But still/ like air/ I’ll rise.”(21-24) When she says “kill me with hatefulness” she’s showing examples of ways ignorant people try to oppress her, but “like air/ I’ll rise” reassures the reader the ignorant person’s hate will not hold her back. As the woman brings closure, she tells her viewers of her victory over ignorant people’s oppression concluding,”bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave/I am the dream and the hope of a slave/I rise I rise I rise”(30-32) Her saying “bringing the gifts that my ancestors gave/I am the dream and the hope of a slave” means through all the success of Africans before her, she lives as a beacon of hope for the future of those suffering like her. The final statement “I rise I rise I rise is a confident defiance for the African-American women today. Overall, through the use of similes, Angelou

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