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Maya Angelou's Essay: Now Sheba Sings The Song

Decent Essays

Where? – will be filmed everywhere
Who? – Multiple pupils around BSHS
*Start of the English vodcast will be me imprisoned relating it towards how the black community at the time would of felt but how they preserved through life, even after everything was thrown at them for decades.
How would you react? You had been oppressed for years and year, been ruled by the white supremacists, being falsely accused of every wrong doing, having to put up with a white corrupt government, who doesn’t think twice about putting you in jail whilst physically and verbally abused. You wouldn’t know how to because in this day an age, this is considered offensive. But then this was normal.
Maya Angelou, born in Marguerite Johnson in St. Louis, Missouri, on April …show more content…

Among her volumes of poetry are A Brave and Startling Truth (Random House, 1995); The Complete Collected Poems of Maya Angelou (1994); Wouldn’t Take Nothing for My Journey Now (1993); Now Sheba Sings the Song (1987); and many more, there lays still I rise a poem written by Maya Angelo written in 1978, throughout this era of persecution and slavery. When taking a first glance at this poem I believed that this poem would have been about the struggles of her everyday life, but through a deeper analysis we will determine the real underlying message behind this …show more content…

This poem “Still I Rise”, offers an interesting blend of tones such as playful and defiant, comical and angry, confident and bitter. Ultimately, this poem gives the overall impression of perseverance/resilience.
The poem’s first word “You” is important. This is a poem clearly addressed to others, the white oppressive corrupt supremacist community at the time. Much of its energy derives from its bold and cheeky comments challenging the common views at the time. Clearly addressed to the white oppressors of black people, the poem presents us with a black woman willing to speak up for herself, for other living Africans, and even for her ancestors. This poem is almost like a tribute to her fallen foe (a lot of blacks died from lynching) almost saying, your death will not be in vein.
Saying that you may have died but your memory will live on carried by our

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