I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings Essay

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    The two main points are stay true to oneself, and for others to be happy in their own skin. She wants others to know that everyone is different, and that is what makes them unique and themselves. “She states that she has no need to draw attention to herself by shouting or jumping or speaking loudly. Rather, when she passes by, she makes people proud, by virtue of

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    Contemporary Art Brazil

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    Brazilian culture up close, I had a chance to visit Histories: Contemporary Art from Brazil" and "Sandra Cinto: Chance and Necessity which is located at USF Contemporary Art Museum. The museum has some artworks done by an Brazilian artists whose approaches address the varied histories of Brazil, some collective, some individual, but all rooted in reflections on the country’s complicated past and present, and vast geographical, racial, and cultural wealth and diversity. I believe this visit is a rich

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    “Caged Bird” Maya Angelou Metaphors, Imagery, and Diction In “Caged Bird,” Maya Angelou compares a free bird and a caged bird to portray the luxury that free birds have compared to the harsh circumstances of victims of oppression that result in struggles. Angelou uses the contrast to relay a message: living things will and should continue to struggle, even with ever so little hope that may seem far, far away. Throughout the poem, Angelou emphasizes the contrast of ease and struggle between the

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    Loss Of Innocence

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    Through the story of an innocent bird in “How Sweet I Roam'd,” William Blake shows how abruptly one can lose their innocence. Such an event can happen over time without the person noticing. Blake's poem portrays the loss of innocence through each stanza, showing how it progressed with every new line. The bird did not notice it was losing it's innocence until it had been captured. At this point, they had no choice but to remember when they were free. Progression into adulthood is similar to what William

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    I remember the first day that I realized that I was different from most kids. When I five years old, I attended Sacred Heart Cathedral Preparatory in San Francisco’s Fillmore District. I was surrounded by diversity from an early age and during that time I was considered outgoing, and an extroverted child that loved to learn. Living in the Fillmore was a great experience, my grandparents live in a massive home two story house which was right up the street from my school. My family would all gather

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    Maya Angelou, a black woman, wrote the poem, “Still I Rise,” in 1978 when racism was still prominent. Maya Angelou was reaching out to a racist community to prove oppression will not bring her down. Angelou brings up topics of what she and every other black person has to endure when living in their communities. She brings up all of the oppression she faces in her community and then continues to say she will rise above it. Maya Angelou uses rhetorical questionsing and hateful diction to prove to others

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    negative aspect, individuals strongly influence people from their degrading words. Many times, men and women nonchalantly state opinions society has formed, not considering their meaning. Angelou states, “But I personally had never heard it before. Never heard the words, despite the thousands of times I had sung them” (Angelou, 2015, p.188). Angelou during this statement refers to the Negro National Anthem. People proclaim statements, ideas, and opinions often based on the norms society has created. Even

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    In the poem “Caged Bird” by Maya Angelou about freedom, emotions, feelings, and depression. In the poem she wrote ’’A free bird leaps on the back of the wind and floats downstream till the current ends and dips his wing in the orange sun rays and dares to claim the sky” (1-5). There is nothing for the bird to do anything better than freedom. Because any cages, even the gold, can be captive. It’s meant, like a beautiful girl, who doesn’t think about love, but she is thinking only about money and

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    “One of the hardest decisions you'll ever face in life is choosing whether to walk away or try harder.” - Ziad K. Abdelnour. Why are decisions difficult to make? Are decisions the two paths that will lead us down to our future? Are they like an answer choice on a test, that we feel the need to stress about whether we choose the right or wrong decision? Perhaps people should realize that making decisions can lead us to embark on new life changing journeys.We need to learn that we should not fear making

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    Be brave; Rise above failure “Being brave is knowing that when you fail, you don’t fail forever.”-Lana Del Rey Being brave when you know you might fail might be considered winning in its own way. Is being brave standing up to that bully or is being brave as simple as talking to your crush? When you fail on something you have to rise above it and look on the brighter side. Is failure something to frown upon or is it something to rise against? Maybe failure is not getting a perfect score on a test

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