Response To My Papa's Waltz By Theodore Roethke

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The first reader’s response of Theodore Roethke poem, My Papa’s Waltz, is pleasant and memorable in manner. The reader, a knowledgeable literature teacher, explained that as she read the poem she began visualizing the little boy recalling fond memories of his father lightheartedly and pure in nature caring for him as a child. Theodore Roethke’s “My Papa’s Waltz”: A Reader’s Response states, “For me the poem’s tone was one of fond recollection: that the adult speaker still remembers small details of this waltzing suggested to me that the child thoroughly enjoyed this dance” (1). The first reader foresaw no interpretation of remorse or malice in My Papa's Waltz. She was prepared to discuss her interpretation with her students and was abruptly surprised by the difference in opinion. Theodore Roethke’s …show more content…

The students were directly affected by words such as, “whisky, death, and beat” stated throughout Roethke’s poem. “First, my students claimed, they didn’t think that my reading adequately dealt with the issue of the father’s drunkenness—which seemed to them to be such a large factor in proving he was abusing his son” (Theodore Roethke’s “My Papa’s Waltz”: A Reader’s Response 5). They were unable to respond to the poem impartially due to the cultural opinions. “My students’ vehement responses to the abuse they perceived in this poem derived largely from their cultural position as readers raised in the last decades of the 20th century” (Theodore Roethke’s “My Papa’s Waltz”: A Reader’s Response 5). Nevertheless, however the first reader strained to explain her positive viewing platform the students were unwavering their original judgement. “My reading of this poem, as essentially a fond boyhood memory so contradicted my students’ impression of violence that most of them were unwilling to relinquish their understanding of the poem” (Theodore Roethke’s “My Papa’s Waltz”: A Reader’s Response

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