Maya Angelou Metaphors

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“I’ve learned that people will forget what you said, people forget what you did, but people will never forget how you made them feel.” This quote from the famed Maya Angelou illustrated not only her personal views, but also the views that she put into her poetry. Angelou’s goal was not to make poetry that was appealing to everyone, her goal was to create art that would resonate with people on an emotional and spiritual level, her goal was to make them feel. Maya Angelou was considered to be a contemporary poet, meaning she used modern language and form in her writing, though she often wrote about issues that have affected people for centuries, and still continue to affect them today, i.e discrimination, oppression, self-identity, etc. These …show more content…

Although she always attempted to create a work that blended together a diverse range of literary techniques, Angelou’s most commonly used devices included imagery, metaphors, similes, and diction. She used imagery throughout her works to help the reader her own memories and feelings as she did. Not only did Angelou often use visual imagery, but she also repeatedly used auditory and gustatory imagery to convey the situation at hand in her works. Maya Angelou also relied on comparisons using similes and metaphors in her poems. Angelou commonly used metaphors to disclose a powerful message, which could be either very direct or subtle depending on the use of the metaphor. Through similes, like metaphors, Angelou was able to portray the central messages of many of her works, and although they are less effective in getting that message across, as they tend to offer a weaker comparison, she still used them to her advantage and is able to strongly communicate the topic of the simile. Angelou also used diction as a dominant literary device in many of her most renowned works. She used diction as a way to convey the theme and message of a passage by changing the diction to fit with the tone, theme, and message. Maya Angelou was a paramount user of literary devices and techniques. She most often used imagery, metaphors, similes, and diction to help get her message across to

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