Authors: Mary; Lupton
There are a number of episodes in which Maya and Momma Henderson disagree about white folks. The most dramatic involves some rural white girls who stand in front of Mama's store and taunt her, like the witches from Macbeth. One of the “powhitetrash” girls brazenly exposes her private parts in a butt-naked handstand to the God-fearing Momma. Symbolically, the adolescent is displaying her white sexuality before Annie Henderson, store owner, a black woman who is unable to respond except through passively humming a spiritual. In his interpretation of this episode, Stephen Butterfield sees Momma's passivity as a victory in self-control (1974, 211), whereas Dolly McPherson reads the confrontation as an example of white girls using their power to “treat a Black woman like another child” (1990, 32). Maya, furious at her grandmother's compliance, wishes that she could blow away the problem with a rifle.
In another racist episode, Momma takes Maya to the town's white dentist, who humiliates his black patients by saying that he'd rather put his “hand in a dog's mouth than in a nigger's” (160). In each instance, it is Annie's passivity that disturbs Maya, who is beginning to articulate her anger about racism. Maya's response is to invent a fantasy in which Momma Henderson holds Dentist Lincoln by the collar and orders him to “leave Stamps by sundown” (161). This stock phrase from a western movie grants Annie the male authority that Maya wants her to have: Annie is the hero, and the dentist is the unforgiven villain. The fantasy, printed in italics, is Maya's way of dealing with the dentist's racist behavior and with her grandmother's inability to question his racism.
It hurts Maya to see her grandmother humiliated by a so-called professional who is unworthy, who even owes her interest payments on a loan. These humiliating situations cause Maya to feel confused toward Momma Henderson, who represents conflicting qualities: she is both strong and weak, courageous and fearful, caring and cold. Angelou exaggerates Annie's power, recalling that Momma Hendersonâover six feet tallâwas “taller than any woman in my personal world” (38). To Maya her physical strength is unequaled. Mildred A. Hill-Lubin, who argues for the cultural importance of the black grandmother in African and African American communities, selects Annie Henderson as a grandmother who represents physical strength and the “stability and the continuity of the Black family and the community” (1986, 257). Although Momma becomes Maya's source of knowledge, values, and morality, she is still troubled by her grandmother's opinions about language, race, and white writers such as Shakespeare, Maya's “first white love” (11). When they recite poetry for Momma, Maya and Bailey are careful to choose the black poet James Weldon Johnson instead of the dead, white Shakespeare.
Uncle Willie, Annie Henderson's son, has been under her special care since he was a child, crippled at the age of three when a babysitter dropped him. Willie walks with a cane to support his disfigured body. In an early scene, Maya witnesses Momma burying Uncle Willie in a large bin, under layers of potatoes and onions, to avoid being detected by the Ku Klux Klan. Still, Uncle Willie has an active role in running the store, which is the hub of the black community. He handles the sales on the night of the heavy-weight championship between the famed black boxer, Joe Louis (1914â1981), and a white man. All of black Stamps gather at Annie's store to watch the historic fight. Men and women living under the yoke of racism think that if Louis loses “we were back in slavery and beyond help” (113).
In the film version of
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
, directed by Fielder Cook, there is a touching scene between Willie and Maya that occurs
after the fight is over. Joe Louis has won and Uncle Willie feels that he has been redeemed, that he, too, is a man who can stand up to whites. Although Uncle Willie's sentiments are, strangely, not conveyed in Angelou's book, they are beautifully presented in the film in dialogue between Maya and her uncle that adds depth to his character.
After Momma Henderson, Maya's brother Bailey is the family member who has the greatest influence on her young life. He is bright, clever, and good-spirited. Maya measures people by her small-framed brother, her hero, her “Kingdom Come” (19). For five years Vivian has ignored Maya and Bailey, at times trying to buy their affection by sending presents. During their estrangement from Vivian Baxter, Maya learns to cope by putting her trust into the strong hands of Annie Henderson and the reliable good feelings of her brother.
One day Bailey Sr. arrives from California to take them on a journey. After the trip has started, he announces that they are going to see their mother. Vivian has left California and is living in St. Louis, Missouri, with the Baxter family, headed by Grandmother Baxter, a neighborhood precinct leader of German/black descent who has connections with the city police. There are three formidable brothers, Tutti, Tom, and Ira. Maya is in awe of her beautiful mother, a woman “too beautiful to have children” (50). She often describes her mother through images of lightness or floating: for instance, she moved “like a pretty kite that floated just above my head” (54).
Six months later, Vivian and the children move into a house with Mr. Freeman, who works in the Southern Pacific Railway yards. The harmony of the newly formed family is brutally disrupted, though, when Mr. Freeman rapes Maya. After the rape it is Bailey and not Vivian who is able to comfort Maya; he is her voice and spirit during the years of silence that follow their return to Stamps.
In a powerful episode Bailey comes home to Momma Henderson shaken and pale. He saw a dead, bloated black man, covered with a sheet, pulled from the water. A white man ordered Bailey and some colored men to put the corpse into a jail filled with prisoners. Confused and unable to understand why white people could have such hatred of blacks, Bailey gets no answers from his grandmother or his uncle.
Bailey's encounter with the dead man prompts Momma Henderson to send the children to Vivian Baxter, who has since left St. Louis and returned to California. In a poignant image that emphasizes the geographical distance between California and Arkansas and between mother and children, Maya imagines a mother who could never “laugh and eat oranges in the sunshine without her children” (42).
Again on a train, Maya and Bailey return to Vivian Baxter. Maya is thirteen and Bailey a year older. Vivian captivates both children with her worldliness and elation. Not until her early twenties does Maya see herself as having separated herself emotionally from her mother. She told novelist Rosa Guy, “I began to see her as a character I would have read about” (1989, 221).
Maya's father, Bailey Sr., is less prominent than Vivian Baxter in shaping Maya's character. He represents the absent father, the man who is not there for his children. This figure is prevalent in American literature, among urban and rural, poor and middle-class, black and white families. Maya sees her father only twice in
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
âfirst, in his initial appearance when he drives his children to St. Louis; and second, when Maya visits him for a bizarre summer vacation in Southern California. In neither instance is he able to show much affection for his daughter. He does not reappear in the other autobiographies. Bailey James Johnson died in San Diego in 1968, the same year that marked the death of Martin Luther King (
Essence
2014, 104).
In her father's absence, Maya finds substitute father figures, men like Mr. Freeman, who will give her the attention her father cannot, or she makes fun of men so they become undesirable to her. She enjoys joking with Bailey about pompous fatherly types like Reverend Thomas, who visits Annie Henderson to take advantage of her home cooking. Uncle Willie, her father's blood brother, is a substitute father in the strictest sense. At one time, Maya, feeling sorry for her uncle's disability, comments that if he wishes, she would be his make-believe daughter. She admits that Uncle Willie would have been a better father than Bailey Sr. But his speech problems and her insecurity prevent a good relationship from developing between them.
The most apparent father substitute is Mr. Freeman, a man who sits up and waits until Vivian comes home from dealing poker in gambling parlors. When Maya has nightmares, the three of them sleep together. One morning after Vivian gets up, Mr. Freeman touches Maya and pulls her on top of him, his right hand moving rapidly. Maya feels “at home” and imagines that he is her “real father” whom she has finally found (61). While not a member of the family, Vivian's live-in boyfriend has a husband's place in Vivian's sex life and a stepfather's role with regard to Vivian's daughter, a trust that he violates in both cases.
When Maya reveals that it was Freeman who raped her, he is put on trial and found guilty. Soon afterward, Freeman's body is discovered, beaten to death. Maya suspects her uncles. After Maya becomes mute, Vivian is unable to break through her wall of silence. Maya and Bailey are once again returned to Stamps.
The black community of Stamps is an extended family. Through her interaction with the black people of Stamps, Maya develops her character, growing stronger and sharpening her wit by associating with people like Sister Monroe, Reverend Thomas, Mr. McElroy, and Mrs. Flowers. Some of Maya's insights are related to social class. Mr. McElroy is the only black man Maya has ever seen whose trousers match his jackets. She learns that he wears suits, and she claims that suits are good things because when men wear them they look a bit like women, making their appearance less severe. Maya and Bailey admire Mr. McElroy because he doesn't go to church, which makes him “courageous,” since he is Annie's neighbor (16).
Almost everyone else in the town is a churchgoer, from Momma Henderson to Deacon Jackson. A great deal of the humor in
Caged Bird
derives from Angelou's caricatures of Southern black folks who've got religion. The funniest episodes involve Sister Monroe, who is not always able to come to the Sunday service. When she does, she shouts as loud as possible to make up for having been absent. One morning when Reverend Taylor is preaching the sermon, Sister Monroe starts yelling “Preach it” so loud the church shakes (33). One deacon hits the preacher, who hits another deacon in a chain reaction while Sister Monroe walks calmly from the altar.
Another figure of ridicule is Reverend Thomas, a repulsive church official who comes to Stamps four times a year; on those occasions he eats “like a hog” at the home of Annie Henderson (27). There are several reasons why Maya and Bailey despise Reverend Thomas: He is obese; he never remembers their names; and worst of all, he eats the very best pieces of chicken at Sunday dinner. He, too, becomes Sister Monroe's victim when one Sunday while he is preaching she hits him so hard on the head with her purse that his teeth fly onto the floor near Maya and Bailey. At this point the children roll on the floor, laughing hysterically until Uncle Willie takes them next door to a church building and gives them “the whipping of our lives” (37).
Of all of the black residents of Stamps, the one person Angelou treats with unqualified respect is Mrs. Bertha Flowers. Maya calls her the “aristocrat of Black Stamps” (77). A self-supporting, independent, graceful woman, Mrs. Flowers gently nurses Maya through her years of silence by reading to her and loaning her books so that Maya's love of literature makes her want to speak it. The critic Mary G. Mason (1990), although she doesn't specify Angelou, has observed a pattern in women's autobiographies in which another womanâa mother, a daughter, a grandmother, a friendâhelps the subject identify herself as a writer. This pattern certainly holds true for Mrs. Flowers, whose encouragement is a major factor in Maya's development as reader, autobiographer, and poet.
Through her experiences with the strong women of Stamps, Maya “links herself to the Southern roots and history of her peopleâto a succession of American Negro female survivors” (Fox-Genovese 1990, 230). Her involvement with the black community in church, at the store, and at picnics empowers Angelou, enabling her to understand the rules for survival in a racist society. Through her growing awareness, she is able to articulate her observations about racism, if not aloud then at least in her thoughts. Thus, she can witness the Joe Louis fight and fear that in his possible defeat each blow to Louis's body is like a black man being beaten or a black maid being slapped for being “forgetful” (113). It is many years before Angelou is able to put such thoughts into spoken words to share with white and black audiences.
The episodes concerning the powhitetrash girls and Dentist Lincoln provide apt examples of Maya's reaction to the racism coming from the white community. As a historical document,
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
captures the vulgarity of white Southern attitudes toward African Americans. Angelou presents this material by recalling racist characters so real that one can feel their presenceâMr. Donleavy, Mrs. Cullinan, and other whites whose bigotry dramatically affects Maya's childhood and leaves such a scar on the mature Maya Angelou that when she finally returns to Stamps in 1982 to film an interview with Bill Moyers, she refuses to cross the bridge into the white part of town.
Of the whites who affect Maya's character, one is Mrs. Viola Cullinan, a woman Maya works for when she is ten. Mrs. Cullinan has a vast array of cups and glasses, including the ones set aside for the servants. The woman treats Maya as though she does not exist, calling her Mary or Margaret instead of her given name, Marguerite. As Maya explains, whites called black people too many other names for centuries for her to tolerate Mrs. Cullinan's abuse. Maya tries to get fired by coming late to work, but to no avail. One day, in a moment of anger, she smashes several pieces of Mrs. Cullinan's prized china. Dolly McPherson sees Maya's intentional breaking of Mrs. Cullinan's china as an affirmation of Maya's “individuality and value.” The confrontation is necessary if Maya is to save herself from the “dehumanizing atmosphere of her environment” (1990, 45).