From the Left

/

Politics

Maya Angelou's Uncomfortable Facts and Truths

By Clarence Page, Tribune Content Agency on

Caution: The following tribute to the late great author-poet Maya Angelou may be hazardous to some of my touchier readers.

The previous paragraph is called a "trigger warning," a disclaimer of the sort that often has been applied to online discussions about rape, sexual abuse and mental illness. In recent months they have spread to a place where power struggles can be most intense: college campuses.

Student leaders at the University of California-Santa Barbara passed a resolution in March that calls for professors to issue trigger warnings and allow students to skip class before presenting "content that may trigger the onset of symptoms of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder."

Similar motions have been proposed at Oberlin College, the University of Michigan, George Washington University, Rutgers University, Georg Washington University and other prestigious schools, according to news reports, to require warnings when course materials are assigned that potentially could shock or alarm some students.

To which I ask, what is the purpose of literature and other arts if not to occasionally shock or alarm students, among other people?

Trigger warnings are presented as a civilized way to alert students that some particularly challenging material is coming up. Fine. But that decision is better left to the classroom instructor than to an outside body of students or administrators.

 

It is important to think about people's feelings and avoid unnecessary distractions. But they also lead to a hypersensitivity about how we think other people might feel when educators should be offering more challenges to help them to improve how they think.

Maya Angelou understood. Her groundbreaking 1969 memoir, "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," despite its many honors, also has often appeared on the American Library Association's annual survey of books most often banned by local schools and libraries.

It is not surprising that the book's story line would make educators reluctant to give "Caged Bird" to students younger than, say, high school. Angelou's life story, beautifully told, is that of a black girl who grew up in the racism and sexism of the Depression-era South, was raped at the age of eight by a boyfriend of her mother and was traumatized so badly by the experience that she stopped talking for almost five years.

Yet, as her story continues to her recovery and maturation, partly under the healing guidance of a family friend who prodded to read books -- lots of books from a local library.

...continued

swipe to next page

(c) 2014 CLARENCE PAGE DISTRIBUTED BY TRIBUNE MEDIA SERVICES, INC.

 

 

Comics

John Cole Gary Markstein Jeff Koterba Gary Varvel David Horsey Mike Luckovich