Sunday, June 28, 2015

What would be a good thesis statement that can be used for "My Papa's Waltz" by Theodore Roethke?I always seem to get stuck on thesis statements!

I usually encourage my students to pick two or three
closely-related poetic elements on which to focus in a thesis,
like:


  1. Speaker, Audience, Tone

  2. Metaphor,
    Imagery, and Theme

  3. Prosody: Meter and Sound
    Effects

"My Papa's Waltz" presents a quandary
among readers: younger readers fear the father, while older readers see him as
relatively harmless.  Do you see him as an alcoholic child-abuser or a fun-loving,
though rowdy, father?  So, take a position and, using approach #1 or #2 above, support
it with textual support.


I find the poem interesting from a
structural level: the first two lines of each stanza seem to be carefree, but the last
two lines have slight turns to a darker side.  Why does Roethke do this?  Is there a
musical or metrical connection to this approach?


Also, look
what other editors have said about how to analyze the poem.  The TPCSTT method always
leads to a good thesis as well.  Again, only focus on two or three of
these:


readability="18">

Title: Ponder the
title before reading the poem


Paraphrase:
Translate the poem into your own
words


Connotation: Contemplate
the poem for meaning beyond the literal
level


Attitude: Observe both
the speaker’s and the poet’s attitude
(tone).


Shifts: Note shifts in
speakers and attitudes or
form


Title: Examine the title
again, this time on an interpretive
level


Theme: Determine what
the poet is saying


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