I know Why the Caged Bird Sings Maya Angelou
Dr.Maya Angelou,
one of the greatest voices in contemporary literature, is an African-American
poet, memoirist, educator, historian, best- selling author, actress, dramatist,
civil rights activist, film maker, director and teacher. She won international
recognition with the publication of ‘I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings’. This
poem expresses the African American’s intense longing for freedom. Angelou uses
the metaphor for a bird struggling to escape its cage as a central image
throughout her autobiographical fiction. But in this poem the caged bird
sings of freedom. As a black woman
she has encountered racial discrimination, segregation and domination. She is
an optimist and the companion of Martin Luther King fighting for the Civil
Rights movement in the USA and achieved what they dreamed.
Maya Angelou
says that a free bird leaps on the back of the wind floats in the blue sky
enjoying the pleasures of life. The free bird stands for the white people
leading luxurious life and dreaming of new business fields and colonies in
order to exploit the poor countries in the world to reap maxim profit.
But a bird walks sadly in its narrow cage. The
caged bird’s wings are clipped and its feet are chained up. So the bird opens
his throat to sing of freedom. The caged bird stands for the Black people
who live in misery, poverty and sorrow, waiting centuries for their God given
birth rights such as equality, citizenship rights and freedom.
The caged bird
sings with painful sound of the things unknown such as equality, liberty and
fraternity. The caged bird never enjoyed freedom. The bird’s song is heard far
way beyond the distant hills and valleys.
The free bird enjoys the freedom and flies in
the depth of the infinite blue sky thinking of new opportunities and planning
to set up new colonies in order to reap more profits and pleasures of life.
But the caged
bird stands on the grave of dreams. The
Black had been working hard as slaves for the white people for centuries. They
built up modern cities in various parts of America, made railways, bridges,
towers and skyscrapers, but still lives in the slums and ghettos. Everywhere
they are rejected and unwanted because they see the boards ‘For whites only’ in
the restaurants, buses and buildings. They have no opportunity for education or
employment and live in poverty and sorrow. So the caged bird sings of things
unknown to him and he sings of equality, liberty and fraternity. Kjt/16-11-2018
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