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writing_womans_lives_symposium_paper_book_v2

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I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings fits the above criteria. Therefore as a representative of African<br />

American political autobiography, it should be included in the Black political canon. In an interview<br />

with Carol Neubauer, Angelou referred to the communal aspect of her autobiographical <strong>writing</strong>:<br />

by the time I started Gather Together I had gone back and reread Frederick Douglass'<br />

slave narrative. Anyway, I love the idea of slave narrative, using the first person singular<br />

and meaning always the third person plural… And I see it all the time in the black<br />

literature, in the blues, and spirituals and the poetry, in essays James Baldwin uses it. 9<br />

Not only is Angelou prioritizing the collective over personal experience but she is also paying tribute<br />

to the presence of this quality of African American <strong>writing</strong> since slave narratives to the present. It<br />

also emphasizes the political nature of her autobiography, as Brewer described it, these types of<br />

autobiographies "must also interweave and frame personal accounts of experience with a communal<br />

'I'" 10 which Angelou has pointed out in the mentioned interview.<br />

In addition, the exclusion of Angelou from the Black political autobiography canon can be based<br />

on how critics view activist/political <strong>writing</strong> based on the extent of the writer's involvement or<br />

engagement with the movement. With such an outlook, the works of the people who have central<br />

roles to the movement such as the autobiographies of Malcolm X, Anne Moody, and Angela Davis<br />

have precedence over others. Therefore, many other writers, whose work aims to raise political<br />

awareness, are excluded, such as Alice Walker and Maya Angelou. Alice Walker explains her<br />

perspective on this issue in the following passage:<br />

It has become a common feeling, I believe, as we have watched our heroes falling over<br />

the years, that our own small stone of activism, which might not seem to measure up to<br />

the rugged boulders of heroism we have so admired, is a paltry offering toward the<br />

building of an edifice of hope. Many who believe this choose to withhold their offerings<br />

out of shame. 11<br />

Therefore, Walker is criticizing the limited perspective of the canon that only qualifies certain<br />

texts, written by central figures of the movement, as political activist <strong>writing</strong> and believes that<br />

everyone's contribution to this field is essential in constructing a better future. Feminist scholar<br />

Maria Lauret has a similar view regarding activism and political <strong>writing</strong>: "activists who put their<br />

bodies at risk often lack time for self‐reflection, whilst the words of those who have it will be hollow<br />

if they are not heard and acted upon." 12 According to Lauret, <strong>writing</strong> and activism cannot fulfill their<br />

intentions without each other and both are necessary in giving a comprehensive depiction as they<br />

provide the missing perspective for the other. This perspective towards activism and <strong>writing</strong> can be<br />

observed in the works of writers such as Walker and Angelou.<br />

The political nature of Angelou's autobiography is an integral part of the main story line of the<br />

narrator's development from childhood to young adulthood. As her autobiography is a record of the<br />

collective experiences of her community, Angelou depicts the everyday life and struggles of African<br />

American in the segregated South during 1930s and 1940s, which was still very similar to the racial<br />

issues present in the 1960s. In an interview with Claudia Tate, Angelou has referred to this collective<br />

experience in her autobiography:<br />

When I wrote I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, I wasn't thinking so much about my<br />

own life or identity. I was thinking about a particular time in which I lived and the<br />

influences of that time on a number of people. I kept thinking, what about that time?<br />

What were the people around young Maya doing? I used the central figure – myself – as a<br />

focus to show how one person can make it through these times. 13<br />

Therefore, Angelou's narrative recounts many of these central experiences of her community. In<br />

her life story, Angelou includes references to the Great Migration, the racial discriminative working<br />

conditions, the Ku Klux Klan threat and the fear of lynching, the segregated educational system and<br />

79

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