Intersections of the knowledge-power nexus as a precursor to (dis)empowerment and resistance in the poetry of Maya Angelou
Abstract
This article investigates how knowledge and its recursive 
relation with power is manifested in the poetry of Maya Angelou. 
It  analyses  how  various  contexts,  such  as  the  social,  political,  
cultural and historical, inform knowledge production and how 
the  Foucauldian  concept  of  the  knowledge/power  nexus  is  
employed  as  a  strategy  of  (dis)empowerment  and  resistance  
by  marginalized  persons  in  her  poetry.  It  also,  explores  how  
Angelou’s  poetry  utilises  the  female  body  as  the  site  of  the  
manifestation  of  the  knowledge/power  nexus  and  resistance.  
The article utilises textual data obtained through critical reading 
and  analysis  of  poems  from  The  Complete  Collected  Poetry  of  
Maya Angelou. In its analyses, it makes use of three poems; Men 
and Phenomenal Woman and Seven Women’s Blessed Assurance. 
It concludes that the knowledge/power nexus as manifested in 
her poetry is representative of a vantage point from which one 
stands  empowered  to  re-examine  their  social  situation  and  re  
conceptualize ways in which to subvert domination.
