Interpretation of Black Culture by Maya Angelou Through Music Poetry
Abstract
African American music covers wide ranges of music and musical genres largely developed by African Americans. Negro spirituals, ragtime, jazz, rhythm and blues, doo-wop, rock and roll, soul, funk, and disco constitute the principal modern genres of it. Maya Angelou successfully applies to different styles of music in her poetry. With work songs, spirituals, souls, funk, jazz and blues, her poetry reveals African Americans’ withstanding hardships and expressing frustration as well as personal love and concerns. Through the analysis of the themes and the effect of the application of music merged with of her poems, the paper attempts to reveal the interpretation of black culture in Angelou’s poetry.
Keywords
Full Text:
PDFReferences
Abernethy, B. (2005, August 26). African-American spirituals. Religion & Ethics Newsweekly. PBS.
Angelou, M. (1994). The complete collected poems of Maya Angelou. New York: Random House, Inc.
Braxton, J. M., & MacLauglin, A. N. (Eds.). (1990). Wild women in the Whirlwind: Afro-American culture and the contemporary literature renaissance. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press.
Floyd, S. A. (1996). The power of black music: Interpreting its history from Africa to the United States. Oxford, US: Oxford University Press.
Henderson, S. (1973). Understanding the new black poetry (p.30). New York: William Morrow & Company, Inc.
Levine, L. (1977). Black culture and black consciousness: Afro-American folk thought from slavery to freedom. New York.
Stepto, R. B. (1979). The phenomenal woman and the severed daughter (Maya Angelou, Audre Lourde). Parnassus: Poetry in Review, 8(1), 313-315.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.3968/8533
Refbacks
- There are currently no refbacks.
Copyright (c) 2016 Studies in Literature and Language
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Online Submission: http://cscanada.org/index.php/sll/submission/wizard
Reminder
How to do online submission to another Journal?
If you have already registered in Journal A, then how can you submit another article to Journal B? It takes two steps to make it happen:
1. Register yourself in Journal B as an Author
Find the journal you want to submit to in CATEGORIES, click on “VIEW JOURNAL”, “Online Submissions”, “GO TO LOGIN” and “Edit My Profile”. Check “Author” on the “Edit Profile” page, then “Save”.
2. Submission
Go to “User Home”, and click on “Author” under the name of Journal B. You may start a New Submission by clicking on “CLICK HERE”.
We only use three mailboxes as follows to deal with issues about paper acceptance, payment and submission of electronic versions of our journals to databases: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]
Articles published in Studies in Literature and Language are licensed under Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 (CC-BY).
STUDIES IN LITERATURE AND LANGUAGE Editorial Office
Address: 1055 Rue Lucien-L'Allier, Unit #772, Montreal, QC H3G 3C4, Canada.
Telephone: 1-514-558 6138
Website: Http://www.cscanada.net; Http://www.cscanada.org
E-mail: [email protected]; [email protected]; [email protected]
Copyright © 2010 Canadian Academy of Oriental and Occidental Culture