On I know why the caged bird sings -- Biography of Maya Angelou -- The Paris review perspective -- I know why the caged bird sings : African American literary tradition and the civil rights era -- The critical reception of I know why the caged bird sings -- The matter of identity in Maya Angelou's I know why the caged bird sings and James Baldwin's If Beale Street could talk -- "The only teacher I remembered" : school, schooling, and education in Maya Angelou's I know why the caged bird sings -- Death as metaphor of self in I know why the caged bird sings -- Breaking the slience : symbolic violence and the teaching of contemporary "ethnic" autobiography -- Reembodying the self : respresentations of rape in Incidents in the life of a slave girl and I know why the caged bird sings -- I know why the caged bird sings : "childhood revisited" -- Racial protest, identity, words, and form -- "What you looking at me for? I didn't come to stay" : displacement, disruption, and black female subjectivity in Maya Angelou's I know why the caged bird sings -- Role-playing as art in Maya Angelou's Caged bird -- Singin' de blues, writing black female survival in I know why the caged bird sings -- A discursive trifecta : community, education, and language in I know why the caged bird sings -- Maya Angelou's Caged bird as trauma narrative.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.