Maya Angelou, the author to I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, writes about a girl who is confronted with sex, rape, and racism at an early stage in her life in detail in her novel. When she is three years old, her parents have a divorce and send her and her four-year-old brother Bailey from California to Arkansas to live with her grandmother in a town that is divided by color and full of racism. They are raised by her grandmother and then sent back to their carefree mother in the absence of a father figure. At age eight, she is raped by her mother’s boy friend while she is sleeping in her mother’s bed. The book also tells about her other sexual experiences during the early parts in her life. Those experiences lead to the birth of her first child.
Throughout the book, I’ve also learned about many racist things. It was painful to read about the hateful treatment of Blacks during that time and the effect that it had on Black children. When Maya had a bad tooth and her grandmother took her to a white dentist in town. The white dentist refused to help Maya because, as he stated, “I would rather put my hand in the mouth of a dog than to put it into a nigger’s mouth.” This incident serves only as an example of the many ways that Blacks were cruelly mistreated in those days.
The book thus explores a lot of important issues, such as: sexuality and race relations, and shows us how society violated her as a young African American female. In I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings Maya Angelou clearly expresses the physical pain of sexual assault, the mental anguish of not daring to tell, and her guilt and shame for having been raped. Her timidity and fear of telling magnify the brutality of the rape. For more than a year after the rape she lives in self-imposed silence, speaking only very rarely. This childhood rape reveals the pain that African American women suffered as victims not only of racism but also sexism.
The Term Paper on The Effects Of Scientific Racism On Black Women
... mothers, aunts, and community othermothers warned young Black women about the threat of rape. One respondent in Clark-Lewis's study, an 87-year ... experimented upon, sexualized and reproductively abused with scientific racism as justification or the underlying premise for the ... rape and sexual extortion by white men has long formed a prominent theme in Black women's writings. Autobiographies such as Maya ...
What I liked most about this book was the reality it revealed. It showed how brutal and cruel the society was. This book made me realize that racism is deeply embedded in the life and history of the nation, and it still exists in today’s society. When we look into our history, from the Chinese Exclusion Act to discrimination against Hispanic Americans etc all people of color have suffered from the racism. Maya, as result of the painful fact of being born a black girl, is only one of millions of victims of racism and sexism. Indeed, racism gives us nothing but pain and hatred. But we don’t know how long it remains in the society. I wish it grew weaker and weaker until one day it disappeared.
Today, our country is already one of the most diverse societies in the world. Americans are proud that we are people with different backgrounds, faiths, viewpoints, and personal characteristics. But we are also one people, bound together not by bloodlines, but by our respect for human rights and the Constitution. Our diversity gives us variety and vitality.
I am hoping that all people in our country will be able to enjoy more and more equal justice and equal opportunity. And I believe we will.