The Differences and Similarities Between Caged Bird and Still I Rise

1327 Words3 Pages

The Differences and Similarities Between Caged Bird and Still I Rise ‘Caged Bird’ and ‘Still I Rise’ are in their own ways similar, because they are both noticeably about the coloured race and the entrapment of that race and their bid for freedom. But both poems also display many differences, like the use of metaphors and ways of expressing their determination and the segregation of their race. Their titles almost sound like opposites with a capture of something and a rise above something, but ‘Still I Rise’ would also be a rise above a capture or an attempt at a capture Maya Angelou, the author, was raised in segregated, rural Arkansas, and so this could be the reason for the content of her poems. I think that she has intentionally expressed these themes strongly in both of these poems because she felt strongly at the time of the segregation of the black communities, being part of one herself. ‘Caged Bird’ is, in my view, a really well written poem, by using a bird as the metaphor of the poem to get the message of the poem across to the reader. By doing this, the author opens up lots of verbs to be used to describe slavery, but also the freedom the bird has in the first stanza, and the adventures that are open to the bird. ‘Still I Rise’ is aimed at the white race and the treatment that the blacks received from them. This is stated right at the beginning to make sure the reader knows this, and is pulled into the poem straight away. However, the writer is not easily down-hearted by this treatment, and is determined to rise above it; she is proud of her colour and willingly declares this throughout the poem. This is similar to ‘Caged Bird’ in which when the bird is captured it always knows that i... ... middle of paper ... ... continuing through the poem, proving her point till the end. In my view, I preferred ‘Still I rise’ as i think it helped people during the times of discrimination to realise that even though they were a different colour, they hadn’t done anything wrong and they should be proud of who they are, and rise above all the judgements. ‘Still I Rise’, is not only a good written poem, but it contains a message and I think that’s what makes it better than ‘Caged Bird’. It also has a lot of metaphors and similes in it, which makes the reader think about what the writer is trying to tell them. Overall I think ‘Still I Rise’ is most effective, because It makes the reader think about their own actions and possibly what they would have done in the writers position, and personally I think as the poem is generally based at them, they would find it more interesting.

Open Document