Remembering Maya Angelou
In 2017, the world lost one of the most important and influential
writers, poets, and essayists of African American--and American Literature.
Maya Angelou passed away today in her Winston-Salem home at the age of
eighty-six.
Marguerite Johnson was born in 1928, and "before she and her brother
[Bailey] were old enough to start school, her parents divorced. Angelou and her
brother grew up in Stamps, Arkansas," and were cared for by "their
grandmother, Annie Henderson." In the autobiographical text that has been
recognized as Angelou's finest, I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings,
the author recounts the events of her first seventeen years, and the methods of
surviving the Jim Crow South taught to her by her benevolent and resilient
grandmother. However, a traumatic event she endured at age ten drove her into a
state of silence that was broken only by her love of literature (Hill). I Know
Why the Caged Bird Sings could easily be located in a feminist genre, inspiring
other feminist (and Womanist) writers like Toni Morrison and Alice Walker;
however her writing transcended racial, gender, and socio-economic lines and
touched readers across multiple demographics.
In the more than eight decades that Angelou lived, she produced volumes of
poetry and essays, and became a formidable instrument of change in the Civil
Rights Movement, acting as the northern coordinator for the SCLC, and in her
cooperative associations with leaders such as Martin Luther King and Malcolm X.
Her marriage to Vus Make led her to a fuller absorption into African culture,
and though the marriage did not last, extended Angelou's influence as an
advocate of civil rights and liberties on a global scale (Hill).
Clearly the author's talents reached beyond the pen and page and extended to
the theater, for which her talents earned her a Tony; a successful nightclub
performance; and her performance as the grandmother of Kunta Kinte in the
television adaptation of Alex Haley's Roots earned her
acclaim. Further accolades include her over thirty honorary doctorates,
accomplishments in film and stage, and the lecture circuit (2). The nation recalls her
recitation of "On the Pulse of Morning" at the 1993 presidential
inauguration of fellow Arkansas native, Bill Clinton:
A Rock, A River, A Tree Maya Angelou's work, life, and influence have made an
indelible mark upon this nation, our lives, and our literature. |
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