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Maya Angelou Still I Rise

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'Still I Rise' is a poem written by Maya Angelou about rising up against racial inequalities and injustices against black Americans by white Americans. Angelou wrote this poem to express the difficulties and differences she experienced in her childhood by people of a different colour, and how hope and self-esteem gave her the power to overcome the hardships that came with being a black American. This message is exposed to readers through the use of repetitions, rhetorical questions and metaphors. As readers, we are left to believe that Angelou is determined to put her history behind her and embark on a new chapter in her life. A key concept is standing up to racial unfairness and prejudices made against black people by white people. Angelou …show more content…

By repeating this message, the lines become more powerful and Angelou’s message stands out, which is to stay strong and never allow anyone or anything to stop you from standing. Towards the end of the …show more content…

Angelou expresses this to show that no matter how many times society judge her, degrade her, or dehumanize her she will continue to believe and have faith in herself because she's aware that she can stand above any anything if she adopts this mentality. An example of this is “Just like moons and like suns, with the certainty of the tides, just like hopes springing high, still, I’ll rise”. In this line, Angelou uses metaphor to compare herself to a force of nature which, in this case, is the “moons”, “suns” and the “tides”. She does this to show that they “rise” each day, and the strength within this inevitable event is what Angelou compares her own strength with; she asserts that as long as the universe is in existence, she will continue to "rise". It is in the author’s intention to show her unwavering optimism and fierce determination, which implies that although the author is a black person, she refuses to submit and undergo a life of oppression as her ancestors before she had. By saying this, Angelou shows her oppressors a glimpse of her

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