Preview

The Champion Of The World By Maya Angelou Summary

Good Essays
Open Document
Open Document
296 Words
Grammar
Grammar
Plagiarism
Plagiarism
Writing
Writing
Score
Score
The Champion Of The World By Maya Angelou Summary
The Champion of the World

In beginning of “The Champion of the World,” by Maya Angelou, she creates a scene with a crowd crammed together “The last inch of space was filled, yet people continued to wedge themselves along the wall of the Store” (104), and emotions running high “The apprehensive mood was shot through with gaiety, as a black sky is streaked with lightening.” (105) In doing so she keeps the controlling idea of a high-spirited night consistent. The impression is set in a way that allows the reader to feel like they are actually there and witnessing these events.

The interweaving of direct quotation in “The Champion of the World,” by Maya Angelou gives the reader insight on how passionate the characters of the story are about

You May Also Find These Documents Helpful

  • Satisfactory Essays

    In the last year, the best book that I have read was My Beloved World by Sonia Sotomayor. It is a autobiography of the life of Sonia Sotomayor, beginning in the Bronx and ending with her in the Supreme Court. She talks about her dreams as a young girl and how she pursued these dreams throughout her college career. After college, she became a prosecutor and began working in the Manhattan D.A’s office. The autobiography ends before her appointment to the supreme court. The most appealing part of this book is her message to women and minorities. She proves that determination and willpower are the most important characteristics a person needs to succeed. I appreciated the fact that the book ended before her appointment in August 2009 because it…

    • 147 Words
    • 1 Page
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    Eighteen year old Madeline Whittier is no ordinary girl, she suffers from SCID, a Severe Combined Immunodeficiency. She is fundamentally allergic to everything and has to live in a decontaminated house. She haven't left her house in seventeen years. So you would imagine she doesn't get many visitors except her mom and her nurse, Carla.…

    • 73 Words
    • 1 Page
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    In 19th century, the society was dominated by male. Edna Pontellier was the wife of Mr. Portlier who was a creole. In French upper class society, the purpose of life for female was taught to be fond of their husbands and children. Woman at that time never lived for themselves. Mrs. Pontellier's friend, Adele Ratignolle, was considered as the perfect woman in the society, because she was a great woman who treated her children better than herself.…

    • 264 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Maya Angelou books and poems relate to real world situations. In her poem phenomenal women it talks about how you should not live in a stereotypical way of life and have confidence in yourself. You should celebrate how remarkable you are and it makes you a champion. Being a woman makes you supreme, because women are a mystery and hard to figure out. She expresses you don’t need to be loud to get attention just being yourself shows who you are. Maya Angelo works states you should embrace your purpose, practice a self-confidence ritual, and enjoy spending time alone, refuse to buy into the media’s image of a perfect woman, refuse to take anything too personally, ask empowering questions, and ask what they can do to improve the world. Her story…

    • 287 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Still I Rise” by the African-American poet Maya Angelou, written almost 40 years after the Harlem renaissance ceased, displays a variety of emotions and poetic devices. Maya Angelou incorporates her personal struggles gives the audience a sense of the determination she felt to reach equality. The reader can see her anger towards the discrimination she faced at the time.…

    • 284 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Maya Angelou and Amy Tan discuss religious problems and culture differences in their literature. The authors have captured these differences by their past experiences of friends and family. Both authors come from a diverse culture, but both face the same harsh society of the American culture and beliefs. The Author's both tell about situations in their short stories of being outcasts and coming from different racial backgrounds and trying to triumph over these obstacles. Angelou and Tan both have a very unique writing ability and style in their short stories.…

    • 813 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    When reading two passages, one by M.F.K. Fisher on the French port of Marseilles and the other by Maya Angelou on the small town of Stamps, I noticed that the passages had some similarities but where entirely different in their effect and the handling of language resources. While Angelou and Fisher organized and constructed their passages similarly, the persona and rhetoric of the authors are opposite.…

    • 325 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Better Essays

    The Long walk Mariah Martinez The Long Walk of the Navajo, or also known as the Long Walk to Bosque Redondo which was a deportation of the Navajo people from their reservations in 1864 from what is today's Arizona and New Mexico by the United Stated Government to be forced walk to Bosque Redondo. The Navajos were aggressively moved from place to place at gunpoint from the United States soldiers and even their homes were being raided leaving behind cattle, land, and their personal belongings . Threw out the whole journey there were many obstacles that not only the Navajo underwent but also the Spanish, Mexican, Apache, Comanche, Ute, and after 1846 the Anglo Americans had gone through the long walks also. "The tension in 1859 and 1860, and…

    • 1880 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Better Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Maya Angelou Still I Rise

    • 1397 Words
    • 6 Pages

    Maya Angelou’s style is very intriguing and captivating due to her usage of tone. Maya Angelou was an American Civil Rights Activist, born in St Louis, Missouri, who lived through the Jim Crow Era - which, as mentioned before, was a critical period in terms of the rise of racial segregation in the United States. Unlike the majority of her kind, Angelou was extremely privileged - becoming a successful actress, author and poet. Although she is privileged and considerably well-off in her own personal endeavors, she is fully aware of the atrocity and inhumanity with which her fellow folk are being treated with on a daily basis. In the poem, she decants and expresses her frustration, but she does so with great subtlety and restraint. Although she uses a confrontational tone (by using the pronoun ‘you’) towards white people (which is the intended audience of the poem), she does not personally attack them in any way. She simply poses rhetorical questions which make the audience re-evaluate their way of thinking and cause them to truly see that their beliefs are founded upon hatred and false accusations. Aside from using a confrontational tone, Angelou also makes use of a perseverant tone which, through close analysis, entails a valuable message for people from all walks of life and, more importantly, the black folk who suffer from racial discrimination. “...I rise..”…

    • 1397 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Maya Angelou Embodiment of

    • 1241 Words
    • 5 Pages

    Franklin D. Roosevelt once said, “Favor comes because for a brief moment in the great space of human change and progress some general human purpose finds in him a satisfactory embodiment.”(www.brainyquote.com) Throughout many centuries in American history, at some point or another there has been a great struggle for African- American people. A struggle filled with many disappointments embodied by raw emotion that has built strength and courage in a people where hope seemed unreachable. Some argue the strength and courage attributed to the work and tireless efforts came from many within the race and those who saw a greater vision for them. One noted and extraordinary person responsible for this is Dr. Maya Angelou. This expository essay will focus on Maya Angelou and the Embodiment of Courage, which has a powerful place in the vision of change and progress sought by a nation of people, will illustrate to illustrate how she embodies the concept of courage though her early life experiences, poetry, and speeches. In selecting this topic, I wanted to capture the essence of the Embodiment of Courage behind Dr. Angelou’s speeches. Her speeches make use of words, which appeal to my raw human emotions, while illustrating the progress oppressed people in America have made. The importance of this topic to the audience is due to people having come to fear what they do not understand and she is effective at providing an alternative perspective than those of ignorance and hate.…

    • 1241 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Powerful Essays

    Any and everything can influence a work of literature. Life experiences, life choices, political events, time periods, or even time eras. In lieu of this concept it can be assumed that an interesting life may produce interesting poetry or stories. Two phenomenal women, Maya Angelou and Jamaica Kincaid portray two different points of view in their works of literature. A lot of things can contribute to their differences, but in particularly their upbringing is a major cause of their variances. In Jamaica Kincaid’s “Girl,” a young girl has the “rules of the world” drilled into her head by her scolding mother while in Maya Angelou’s “Woman Work” a mother faces the adversities of her life on her own. With such different positions in life and different relationships with elders, when paired against the other each of the poems have contrasting views due to their author’s lives.…

    • 1436 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Powerful Essays
  • Satisfactory Essays

    Champion of the World

    • 271 Words
    • 2 Pages

    Maya Angelou shows her point in “Champion of the World” by showing that nobody is inferior to anybody else. She reinforces her point throughout the entire story by having race to race comparisons. The story is directed to all those who think that they are superior to those who have a different skin color or race. She reiterates racism throughout the short story by pinning race on race. The story and message told by the story are effective because she used different techniques for the audience to go on. She told about all of the African-American people in the store listening closely to the radio and made it into a really big deal. By making it into a big deal we can understand that the African-Americans were counting on a win by, one of their kind, Joe Louis. In paragraph sixteen, Maya Angelou gives examples about what would to come if Joe Louis were to lose. “It was another lynching”, “a black boy whipped and maimed.” She uses these examples because that is how it used to be and how she thought it would be if Joe were to lose. The examples she uses are strong and bold and show us that the black people couldn’t afford to lose in another aspect of life. She needed to prove a point and she did just that. She wanted the ones to think that they were superior to open their eyes and see that they are no different from anyone else that walks this earth. Regardless of skin color, race, or nationality, there should not be discrimination and this story demonstrates…

    • 271 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Satisfactory Essays
  • Good Essays

    “Courage is the most important of all the virtues, because without courage you can't practice any other virtue consistently. You can practice any virtue erratically, but nothing consistently without courage.” – Dr. Maya Angelou. This inspiring poet, novelist, historian, educator, actress, filmmaker, producer, memoirist, dramatist, and civil rights activist has had a superior impact on today’s American society. (A&M TV) Maya Angelou is an African American woman who went from poverty to international success. Born Marguerite Ann Johnson in Saint Louis, Arkansas to Vivian and Bailey Johnson. Her parents divorced when she was three years of age. Her and her brother, Bailey Jr., were sent to live with their grandmother in a small town called Stamps, Arkansas. Like many of the African American children that grew up in Maya’s time, she faced racial discrimination. She was always positive about it, because of the tradition old-fashion African American household she was raised in. She gives her grandmother and extended family in Stamps credit for all of the lessons and values she was taught that helped her significantly later in her adult life and while pursuing her career. Bailey and Maya were extremely close. He suffered from a bad stutter, so he could never correctly pronounce her name. He decided to call her “My” for my sister. After watching a video on the Mayan Indians, he then began to call her Maya. The name stuck. When Maya was seven years old, her and Bailey were sent to visit their mother in Chicago. Her mother’s boyfriend sexually molested her. She was too ashamed and embarrassed to inform any adults on what had happened to her, so she confided in her brother. (America Academy of Achievement) Maya’s uncle found out about what his sister’s boyfriend had done to his niece and killed her attacker. She felt that her words had killed the man, so she fell into a long phase of silence that lasted for five years. She often expressed her feelings through poetry,…

    • 706 Words
    • 21 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Maya Angelou

    • 763 Words
    • 2 Pages

    With that basic idea of where Maya Angelou is going with this poem, the literary techniques and writing style can be analyzed a little further and applied to the main idea and message of the poem. The tone and diction of the poem, used in conjunction, is one of the more noticeable techniques that Angelou uses to strengthen the poem. The tone of the poem shows the somewhat fear and deep concern that arises in people…

    • 763 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Good Essays
  • Good Essays

    Throughout her narrative, Angelou demonstrates her emotional transition between hopefulness and disappointment through the use of similes. To this end, she thinks of the graduation class “like travelers with exotic destinations,”…

    • 640 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Good Essays