The Life and Accomplishments of Maya Angelou

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The Life and Accomplishments of Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou has inspired me in more ways than one, and I had to write about her. When Maya speaks people listen. She has this wisdom that only few have, especially when life wasn’t always great. She turned tragedy into triumph, and helped others in doing so. So, Maya has proven too many women, especially black women that you succeed, even if you have had a child in your teen years. She’s proof that with determination nothing is unattainable.

I chose to write the paper as a timeline of Maya Angelou’s life. I started with birth, and concluded with present day, as Maya is still alive. Maya Angelou is not only a poet, but an author, activist, professor, and screenplay written. Maya Angelou was actually born Marguerite Annie Johnson in St. Louis, Missouri. Both Maya and her brother Bailey, was sent to live with their grandmother in Stamps, Arkansas.

The move happened when Maya was three year old, and it was a result of he parents divorcing. Bailey, Maya’s little brother couldn’t pronounce her name Marguerite, so he called her my. Soon after reading a book about the Maya Indians, Bailey began to call his sister Maya. While living in Arkansas, Maya faced racial discrimination everyday, which was legally enforced at that time.

Even though she grew up sealing with discrimination, Maya was able to retain a deep religious faith. Maya’s relationship with her grandmother, brother, and extended family was very sound and loving. They instilled values and morals in her that helped shape her future, and career.

At the age of 8 while visiting her mother in Chicago, she was raped by her mother’s boyfriend. Being ashamed of what happened; Maya only told Bailey what happened to her. After eventu...

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... even though he whites wanted to repress and enslave blacks, they couldn’t any longer. Whatever they did, or try to do wouldn’t be able to break the black pride, and knowledge.

To me the underlying premise is courage. One must have courage, and pride to overcome adversity, and challenges. I figured the repetition of I rise at the end is said as assurance. Assurance to her as well as others, regardless of what she will rise.

Bibliography:

Works Cited

Maya Angelou. (n.d.). BrainyQuote.com. Retrieved April 5, 2011, from BrainyQuote.com Web site: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/quotes/m/mayaangelo148652.html

Academy of Achievement (Maya Angelou Biography). (n.d.). Retrieved April 5, 2011, from http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/ang0bio-1

Angelou, M. (1969). I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. New York: Random House Publishing Group .

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