"Still I Rise" Video Summary
Visit us at https://www.gradesaver.com/still-i-ri... to read the full video transcript and our study guide for this poem, which includes a full list of characters, themes, and much more. Originally published in 1978, “Still I Rise” is one of Maya Angelou’s most celebrated poems. Published as part of Angelou’s third poetry collection, the piece was written during a highly prolific time in the author’s career. Angelou grew up in Missouri during the height of Jim Crow-era racism. She focused this poem on the power of hope in facing overwhelming adversity and oppression, particularly that which has impacted Black Americans since the dawn of slavery. Therefore, “Still I Rise” can be read as a celebration of Black joy and resilience in the face of hardship. The poem is made up of nine stanzas and takes the form of a call and response, with the speaker addressing an unspecified oppressor in the second person throughout. The repetition of the word “you” seems to refer to both an embodied individual and the larger systems of white oppression built to target Black Americans, just as “I” seems to refer to both the speaker herself and the Black community as a whole. Addressing her oppressor, the speaker declares her ability to “rise” above hatred and bigotry, which ranges from intentionally misrepresenting Black history to committing acts of physical violence. “You may shoot me with your words / You may cut me with your eyes / You may kill me with your hatefulness / But still, like air, I’ll rise.” This act of "rising” is described as timeless and eternal, a magic trick that she and her community will perform. They will continue to persist with the same constancy as the natural world: “Just like moons and like suns / With the certainty of tides,” or “like dust,” they will rise. The speaker also asks her unspecified oppressor if her “sexiness [upsets them],” or if her” haughtiness [offends them],” as they seem disappointed that they cannot keep her down. She brags that you would think she has "oil wells pumping in [her] living room,” and “diamonds at the meeting of [her] thighs,” for all of the confidence she exudes. Despite the oppressor’s eagerness to see her “broken,” with “bowed head and lowered eyes,” she will carry herself with the confidence, or even cockiness, of a rich and attractive woman. These alternating declarations of joy and rage culminate in the last two stanzas of the poem, wherein the speaker describes herself rising up from the shame and pain of slavery, describing herself as “the dream and the hope of the slave.” Filled with hope for a new day, Angelou’s speaker closes the poem with the repetition of the two words that run triumphantly throughout it: “I rise / I rise / I rise.”

Still I Rise by Maya Angelou - Poem Summary, Analysis, Review

Analysis of 'Still I Rise' by Maya Angelou

Summary and Analysis of 'Still I Rise' by Maya Angelou | Literature: Non-African Poetry

The Life of Maya Angelou | Simple History

Still I Rise Poem Performed By Chantal Georges | Maya Angelou | Badass Women 50 Plus

Chiwetel Ejiofor reads possibly the funniest letter of recommendation ever

She’s 12. She Sings Aretha Franklin… Until Simon TELLS Her to Do It Acapella! 😳

Still I Rise by Maya Angelou | Top grade analysis

Maya Angelou - Voice of the Voiceless - US History - Extra History

"Still I Rise" by Maya Angelou Poetry Analysis & Annotations: IGCSE English | Narrator: Barbara Njau

Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

Medical White Molecular Background video | Footage | Screensaver

Power and Conflict Poetry: Animated Summary of All 15 Poems

You Think She’s Not Interested? Watch This First | Female Psychology

Maya Angelou Still I Rise Poem Explanation

Maya Angelou - Civil Rights Activist & Author | Mini Bio | BIO

Toni Morrison Beautifully Answers an "Illegitimate" Question on Race (Jan. 19, 1998) | Charlie Rose

Give this story five minutes - It will heal You

IF by Rudyard Kipling (A Life Changing Poem)

