Growing up in Stamps, she comes head to head with an entrenched southern racism that patents itself in formidable daily indignities and affronts, as well as petrifying lynch mobs: "If growing up is painful for the Southern Black girl, being aware of her displacement is the rust on the razor that threatens the throat. It is an unnecessary insult" (4). This vivid assertion ends the opening section of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. Although this portion, which acts as a prologue, mostly emphasizes Maya's point of view at five or six years old, this statement clearly comes from Angelou's adult voice. Looking back on her childhood experiences, Angelou notes that she not only fell victim to a hostile, racist, and sexist society, but to other social forces as well, including the displacement she felt from her family and her peers. Maya feels displaced primarily because when she was three years old, her parents sent her away to live with her grandmother. This early separation, as well as subsequent ones, leave her feeling rootless for most of her childhood. Angelou's autobiography likens the experience of growing up as a black girl in the segregated American South to having a razor at one's throat. Her constant awareness of her own displacementthe fact that she differed from other children in appearance and that she did not have a sense of belonging associated with anyone or anyplacebecomes the "unnecessary insult" that she must deal with at such a young age. Over the course of the work, Maya details numerous negative effects of such displacement, including her susceptibility to Mr. Freeman's sexual molestation. Maya often imaginatively envisions herself as a beautiful, blonde white female with blue eyes ensnared in, in her own view, a distasteful African-American human being. Maya and her brother, Bailey, endure the callous struggles of being
Growing up in Stamps, she comes head to head with an entrenched southern racism that patents itself in formidable daily indignities and affronts, as well as petrifying lynch mobs: "If growing up is painful for the Southern Black girl, being aware of her displacement is the rust on the razor that threatens the throat. It is an unnecessary insult" (4). This vivid assertion ends the opening section of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. Although this portion, which acts as a prologue, mostly emphasizes Maya's point of view at five or six years old, this statement clearly comes from Angelou's adult voice. Looking back on her childhood experiences, Angelou notes that she not only fell victim to a hostile, racist, and sexist society, but to other social forces as well, including the displacement she felt from her family and her peers. Maya feels displaced primarily because when she was three years old, her parents sent her away to live with her grandmother. This early separation, as well as subsequent ones, leave her feeling rootless for most of her childhood. Angelou's autobiography likens the experience of growing up as a black girl in the segregated American South to having a razor at one's throat. Her constant awareness of her own displacementthe fact that she differed from other children in appearance and that she did not have a sense of belonging associated with anyone or anyplacebecomes the "unnecessary insult" that she must deal with at such a young age. Over the course of the work, Maya details numerous negative effects of such displacement, including her susceptibility to Mr. Freeman's sexual molestation. Maya often imaginatively envisions herself as a beautiful, blonde white female with blue eyes ensnared in, in her own view, a distasteful African-American human being. Maya and her brother, Bailey, endure the callous struggles of being