Contributor: Melissa Kowalski. Lesson ID: 11518
Wouldn't it be an honor to read your poem at a presidential inauguration or be on Oprah? What price would you pay for that privilege? Read how Angelou's life shaped her poetry. Then write your own!
Unlike many poets who only earn fame after their death, Maya Angelou was famous during her lifetime.
From winning the Presidential Medal of Freedom to composing and presenting a poem at a presidential inauguration, Angelou was widely respected as a poet and historian in the latter half of the twentieth century and after her death in 2014.
However, Angelou did not set out to be a poet and writer. In fact, her life began rather unextraordinarily as the child of working-class African-American parents in St. Louis, Missouri.
To learn more about Angelou's life, read this Maya Angelou biography. As you read about Angelou's unusual path to literary stardom, answer the following questions on a separate sheet of paper.
When you have finished answering those questions, consider this one.
Since Angelou lived in the latter half of the twentieth century and was famous for the last four decades of her life, many interviews and recordings with Angelou have been archived by the media.
To hear Angelou speak about her own life and literary inspirations, watch the video below and listen for the things that Angelou says have influenced her life.
God and the power of His love and redemption were not the only themes in Angelou's life that influenced her poetry. Other than the power of religion and God, Angelou also incorporated the following themes in her poetry.
Survival
Unity
An African American woman's identity and place in society
Memory
Love
Now that you know more about Angelou's life and the themes she used in her poetry, move on to the Got It? section to analyze several of her poems.