Maya Angelou’s Africa: Diasporic Identity in All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes

Authors

  • Maria Aparecida Andrade Salgueiro Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro
  • Felipe Fanuel Xavier Rodrigues Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17851/2317-2096.25.3.31-48

Keywords:

Africa, Maya Angelou, African-American identity

Abstract

This article aims to reappraise Maya Angelou’s journey on African soil, through the critical reading of her autobiographical narrative about the period in which she lived in Ghana. From a broad perspective of cultural analysis, this study directs attention to the quest for identity of this African-American author in her relationship with Africa and its meanings. The characteristics of Angelou’s writing are investigated in parallel with the themes that motivate her work, in order to distinguish her appropriation of the autobiographical genre. Her identity as a black diasporic subject, who recounts her own experiences beyond the historical limits of colonialism, reveals a unique African heritage which finds its means of cultural struggle in creative imagination.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Maria Aparecida Andrade Salgueiro, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

Doutora pela Universidade Federal Fluminense e Pós-Doutora pela Universidade de Londres. Professora Associada – Instituto de Letras – Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ). Coordenadora Geral do Centro de Estudos Interculturais do Escritório Modelo de Tradução. Presidente da Casa de Leitura Dirce Côrtes Riedel – UERJ. Pesquisadora do CNPq – Cientista do Nosso Estado – FAPERJ.

Felipe Fanuel Xavier Rodrigues, Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro

Bolsista CAPES/Fulbright na área de Literatura, no Dartmouth College – EUA (2014-2015). Membro do Grupo de Pesquisa do Centro de Estudos Interculturais do ESCRTRAD/UERJ. Doutorando em Literatura Comparada PPGL – Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (UERJ).

References

ANGELOU, Maya. The complete collected poems of Maya Angelou. Nova York: Radom House, 1994.

ANGELOU, Maya. All God’s children need traveling shoes. In: ANGELOU, Maya. The collected autobiographies of Maya Angelou. Nova York: The Modern Library, 2004 [1986]. p. 881-1052.

BHABHA, Homi K. O local da cultura. Trad. Myriam Ávila, Eliana Lourenço de Lima Reis e Gláucia Renate Gonçalves. Belo Horizonte: Editora UFMG, 2010.

ELLIOT, Jeffrey M. (Ed.). Conversations with Maya Angelou. Jackson e Londres: University Press of Mississippi, 1989.

GILROY, Paul. The black Atlantic: modernity and double consciousness. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1993.

GOBRY, Ivan. Vocabulário Grego da Filosofia. Trad. Ivone C. Benedetti. São Paulo: Martins Fontes, 2007.

GOMES. “Visíveis e invisíveis grades”: vozes de mulheres na escrita afrodescendente contemporânea. Caderno Espaço Feminino. Uberlândia: EDUFU, v. 12, n. 15, p. 13-26, 2004.

HALL, Stuart. Da diáspora: identidades e mediações culturais. Trad. Adelaine La Guardia Resende et al. Belo Horizonte: Editora UFMG, 2011.

KIERKEGAARD. O conceito de ironia: constantemente referido a Sócrates. Trad. Álvaro Luiz Montenegro Valls. 3. ed. Bragança Paulista: EDUSF, 2006.

LUPTON, Mary Jane. Maya Angelou: a critical companion. Westport: Greenwood Press, 1998.

MCLAREN, Joseph. Alice Walker and the legacy of African American discourse on Africa. In: OKPEWHO, Isidore; DAVIES, Carole Boyce; MAZRUI, Ali A. (Ed.). The African diaspora: African origins and new world identities. Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2001. p. 525-537.

MCPHERSON, Dolly A. Order out of chaos: the autobiographical works of Maya Angelou. Nova York: Peter Lang, 1990.

PREZIOSI, Donald (Ed.). The art of art history: a critical anthology. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998.

SALGUEIRO, Maria Aparecida Andrade. Escritoras negras contemporâneas: estudo de narrativas – Estados Unidos e Brasil. Rio de Janeiro: Caetés, 2004.

SAUNDERS, James Robert. Breaking out of the cage: the autobiographical writings of Maya Angelou. In: BLOOM, Harold (Ed.). Maya Angelou. Nova York: Bloom’s Literary Criticism, 2009. p. 3-15.

SMITHERS, Gregory D. Challenging a Pan-African identity: the autobiographical writings of Maya Angelou, Barack Obama, and Caryl Phillips. Journal of American Studies, Cambridge University Press, p. 1-20, 2011.

THOMPSON, Robert Faris. Flash of the Spirit: African & Afro-American Art & Philosophy. Nova York: Random House, 1984.

THURSBY, Jacqueline S. Critical companion to Maya Angelou: a literary reference to her life and work. Nova York: Facts On File, 2011.

TRAYLOR, Eleanor W. Maya Angelou writing life, inventing literary genre. In: BLOOM, Harold (Ed.). Maya Angelou. Nova York: Bloom’s Literary Criticism, 2009. p. 91-105.

WALL, Cheryl A. Maya Angelou. In: GATES, Jr., Henry Louis; SMITH, Valerie A. (Ed.). The Norton anthology of African American literature. 3. ed. New York: Norton, 2014. p. 944-957.

Published

2016-04-28

How to Cite

Salgueiro, M. A. A., & Rodrigues, F. F. X. (2016). Maya Angelou’s Africa: Diasporic Identity in All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes. Aletria: Revista De Estudos De Literatura, 25(3), 31–48. https://doi.org/10.17851/2317-2096.25.3.31-48