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All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes
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All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes : ウィキペディア英語版
All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes

''All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes'', published in 1986, is the fifth book in African-American writer and poet Maya Angelou's seven-volume autobiography series. Set between 1962 and 1965, the book begins when Angelou is 33 years old, and recounts the years she lived in Accra, Ghana. The book, deriving its title from a Negro spiritual, begins where Angelou's previous memoir, ''The Heart of a Woman'', ends - with the traumatic car accident involving her son Guy - and closes with Angelou returning to America.
As she had started to do in her first autobiography, ''I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings'', and continued throughout her series, Angelou upholds the long tradition of African-American autobiography. At the same time she makes a deliberate attempt to challenge the usual structure of the autobiography by critiquing, changing, and expanding the genre. Angelou had matured as a writer by the time she wrote ''Traveling Shoes'', to the point that she was able to play with the form and structure of the work. As in her previous books, it consists of a series of anecdotes connected by theme. She depicts her struggle with being the mother of a grown son, and with her place in her new home.
Angelou examines many of the same subjects and themes that her previous autobiographies covered. Although motherhood is an important theme in this book, it does not overwhelm the text as it does in some of her other works. At the end of the book, she ties up the mother/son plot when she leaves her son in Ghana and returns to America. According to scholar Mary Jane Lupton, "Angelou's exploration of her African and African-American identities"〔Lupton, p. 139〕 is an important theme in ''Traveling Shoes''. By the end of the book, Angelou comes to term with what scholar Dolly McPherson calls her "double-consciousness",〔McPherson, p. 133〕 the parallels and connections between the African and American parts of her history and character. Racism continues to be an important theme as she learns more about it and about herself. Journey and a sense of home is another important theme in this book; Angelou upholds the African-American tradition of the slave narrative and of her own series of autobiographies. This time she focuses on "trying to get home", or on becoming assimilated in African culture, which she finds unattainable.
''All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes'' received a mixed reception from critics, but most of their reviews were positive.
==Background==

''All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes'', published in 1986, is the fifth installment of Maya Angelou's series of seven autobiographies. The success of Angelou's previous autobiographies and the publication of four volumes of poetry had brought Angelou a considerable amount of fame by 1986.〔Hagen, p. 118〕 ''And Still I Rise'', published in 1978, reinforced Angelou's success as a writer. Her first volume of poetry, ''Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water 'fore I Diiie'' (1971) was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize.〔〔It was Angelou's early practice to alternate a prose volume with a poetry volume.〕
As writer Hilton Als states, Angelou was one of the first African-American female writers to publicly discuss her personal life, and one of the first to use herself as a central character in her books, something she continues in ''Traveling Shoes''. Writer Julian Mayfield, who calls her first autobiography ''I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings'' "a work of art that eludes description",〔 states that Angelou's work sets a precedent not only for other Black women writers, but for the genre of autobiography as a whole.〔
Als called Angelou one of the "pioneers of self-exposure", willing to focus honestly on the more negative aspects of her personality and choices.〔 For example, while Angelou was composing her second autobiography, ''Gather Together in My Name'', she was concerned about how her readers would react to her disclosure that she had been a prostitute. Her husband Paul Du Feu talked her into publishing the book by encouraging her to "tell the truth as a writer" and "be honest about it".〔Lupton, p. 14〕 Through the writing of her life stories Angelou has become recognized and highly respected as a spokesperson for Blacks and women.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url = http://www.poetryfoundation.org/bio/maya-angelou )〕 It made her, as scholar Joanne Braxton has stated, "without a doubt, ... America's most visible black woman autobiographer".
According to McPherson, ''Traveling Shoes'' is "a mixture of Maya Angelou's personal recollection and a historical document of the time in which it is set",〔McPherson, p. 105〕 the late 1950s. This was the first time that many Black Americans, due to the independence of Ghana and other African states, as well as the emergence of African leaders such as Kwame Nkrumah, were able to view Africa in a positive way.〔 Ghana was "the center of an African cultural renaissance"〔McPherson, p. 107〕 and of Pan-Africanism during this time.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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