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Summary Still I Rise GCSE analysis

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In-depth analysis notes of GCSE English - Still I Rise, including themes, symbols and poetic devices used. About the author: - Obtained grade 9 (highest grade) in GCSE English Language and English Literature (Pearson Edexcel IGCSE)

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GCSE
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English








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Uploaded on
January 13, 2026
Number of pages
1
Written in
2023/2024
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Summary

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Still I rise – analysis

- powerful statement against anti-black racism in America
- insistence on their ultimate, inevitable triumph over violence and hate

Themes:
1. Defiance in the face of Oppression
- Society tries to humiliate the speaker, who has little power to fight back (“bitter, twisted lies”)
- refusal to bend to the speaker’s will
- acts associated with traditional signs of wealth: “oil,” “gold,” and “diamonds.”

- repeatedly rises above violent prejudice and hatred, living and thriving
- rise of “dust” to “air,” → located physically above the earth
- rise of “moon and…suns,’’ → speaker’s rise in inevitable and unstoppable; her dignity and
strength are qualities that society can’t touch

2. Power and Beauty of Blackness
- associates her body with symbols of value “oil wells’’, “gold mines’’, “diamonds” → critique
racist and sexist assumptions of beauty and power as being tied only to whiteness and
masculinity
- Biblical allusion: “like dust” → God created humans from “dust,” and humans return to “dust”
once they die. By stating that she is “like dust,” the speaker asserts her full humanity; she is as
much a creation of God as anyone else.

Symbols:
1. Valuable objects
- “Oil wells” “Gold mines” “Diamonds” → highly desired by human society and/or considered
beautiful.
→ symbolically associated with the oppressed speaker, indicating the inherent beauty and
value of her body no matter how society may humiliate and look down on her

2. The Ocean
- Symbolises power: a force that cannot be inhibited by human efforts
- Waves may fall, but will always rise again → represents the speaker’s inevitability to rise
above oppression

Metaphor
- “shoot me” “cut me” “kill me” → emphasises how painful it is to be surrounded by racism in
society
- “I am the dream and the hope of the slave” → escalation of the previous similes, contributes
to a definitive, powerful conclusion




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Selling GCSE notes. Obtained Grade 9 (highest grade) in all my GCSE subjects including: English Language and English Literature, Maths, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, Geography, History, Music Contact for any queries: OR Instagram:@twilightxcafee

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