Maya Angelou I know why the caged bird sings
In this coming of age autobiography, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, Maya Angleou goes from a young, awkward girl to a confident independent mother at the age of 16. Maya wrote this book in the early 1970s when women autobiographies were informing readers of the importance of all women in America, including African American women. Maya was living at a time when racism and segregation were at its highest. In her story, she writes about her life while describing the battles of being a young, black, and an independent female. These factors are already hard enough just being when society is being ruled by beauty and white standards, but she deals with going through even more tough battles. One of the most difficult battles of Maya was she was sexually molested and raped by her mother's boyfriend at the young age of eight. She also endured instability while moving back and forth from state to state repeatedly with her older brother throughout her younger years. But remarkably, she learns and grows from her life experiences and becomes an intelligent employed young woman, as the book's theme explores her coming of age. At the beginning of the book, Maya shares with her readers her first learning experience, which foreshadows the prob
Showing readers just like Maya what the outside of it looks like, making it a learning and educational experience. Maya Angleou is an inspirational and educational author to all readers in the book I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. In probably the second most impacting event that happened to Maya in the book was Maya's expressed feelings of her sexuality. Maya was the first ever-black African American ever to work on streetcars, when at the time the business was not accepting colored people to work for streetcars. The most highlighting event in the story was the incident when May, at the age of eight was the rape of Maya from her mother's boyfriend, Mr. While attempting to read her poem, she begins to get nervous, stutters, and then runs out of the church as she starts using the bathroom in her pant but is laughing at herself, which foreshadows her later ending success. But Maya showed without pointing out, the exterior of the situation. Most teenage mothers like Maya, have done the same thing Maya did or would have done the same thing Maya did, by not telling her mother and stepfather of her pregnancy until 3 weeks before her son's birth. She related to many women in this event when she blamed herself for the crime and soon felt sympathy for Mr. She doesn't tend to look back on or hold it on her shoulders, instead she tries to forgive and forget, and moves on. When she and her brother Bailey, move back and forth her grandmother's home to their mother's home, she still seemed to maintain herself and her schoolwork, and didn't allow the situations to have huge effect on her. Maya Angelou has related or has in some form of relation to a lot of readers, and especially young adults in the story, but most to young teenage mothers. "In an autobiography, it is sometimes a way for a writer to reflect on his/her life, and try to describe memories of the past, and revelations for the future. Maya showed readers how hard she tried to achieve her goal and in the end, because of her hard work, her goal was achieved.
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