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Analysis Of Maya Angelou's 'Champion Of The World'

Decent Essays

In the excerpt “Champion of The World” adapted from Chapter 19 of Author Maya Angelou’s ‘I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings” The author makes an outrageous claim about African-Americans based on the victory of Iconic Heavyweight Champion Joe Louis against a White contender during a title match in the late 1930s. Right at the very end of this piece the Author makes a bold statement in response to the actions of visitors who were temporarily in town during the fight. Their decision to make arrangements to stay in town overnight and possibly avoid unwanted harassment (typically by their unsatisfied Caucasian counterparts), prompted Angelou to suggest that because Joe Louis continued to defend his Championship title in the fight he proved to be the …show more content…

At this time period (circa 1930s) it is understandable for the common perspective to be racially biased given the fact that the peak of the Civil Rights Movement was decades away. However, as a socially conscience individual I feel that it is ignorant and inexcusable to inaccurately make claims based off emotions or events that occurred to benefit a person of any particular ethnic background because wholistic facts are not considered due to the overflow of cultural emotion. If possible, could anyone imagine how extensively tedious it would be to include every aspect, of every nature, to determine which race is superior in strengths. In a way, it can observed that this fight is figuratively substituted as a cultural show down where the victory is accredited to the whole race and not Louis himself. This victory symbolises as a cultural advance in the African American race as portrayed by Angelou and the other store patrons through actions and strong comparison to oppression through violence throughout the excerpt. “My race groaned. It was our people falling...It was a white woman slapping her maid for being forgetful.”(Paragraph 16) In connection, this can be associated with the fact that the outcome had such a strong emotional effect as said best in Paragraph 17: “This Might be the end of the world. If Joe Lost we were back in slavery and beyond help”. ( M.Angelou,”I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings”,1969) The Author uses this overstatement and many others in an attempt to relate the passionate emotions of racial separation and the perspectives associated. From the perspective of the Author it seems as if the defeat will cause such a cultural embarrassment so much so that it could be equal to

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