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Science & Tech Quote by Maya Angelou

"While the rest of the world has been improving technology, Ghana has been improving the quality of man's humanity to man"

About this Quote

Angelou flips the scoreboard of modernity with one sly reversal: if the world wants to measure progress in gadgets, Ghana offers a different metric - how people treat each other. The line is built like a corrective to tech triumphalism, the familiar story that history is a parade of “advances” that conveniently ignore who gets left out, exploited, or rendered invisible along the way. By framing Ghana as “improving the quality of man’s humanity to man,” she turns development into a moral practice, not an engineering feat.

The intent is partly praise, partly provocation. Angelou isn’t arguing that technology is frivolous; she’s indicting a global hierarchy that equates sophistication with machinery and assumes nations in Africa are “behind.” Her phrasing quietly exposes the condescension baked into that assumption. “The rest of the world” becomes a monolith - busy upgrading devices - while Ghana is cast as a place upgrading human relations. It’s a rhetorical judo move: the supposed periphery becomes the ethical center.

Context matters. Angelou lived in Ghana in the early 1960s, during the charged optimism of post-independence Africa and the wider Black diaspora’s search for political and spiritual home. Her Ghana is not a postcard; it’s an argument against Western modernity’s emotional illiteracy. The subtext is a challenge to readers: if your technology is astonishing but your compassion is underdeveloped, what exactly have you improved?

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Ghana Focuses on Humanity: A Maya Angelou Perspective
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About the Author

Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou (born April 4, 1928) is a Poet from USA.

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