Every argumentative paper you write for our course must have a thesis.
A thesis is a claim. It is a statement of the thing your paper is trying to show your own readers about a text you have read. Very often, the claim will be simple and straightforward enough to express in a single sentence, and it will usually appear early on in the paper to give your readers a clear sense of the project of your paper.
A good thesis is a claim that is strong. For our purposes, the best way to define a strong claim is to say it is a claim for which you can imagine an intelligent opposition. It is a claim that you actually feel you need to argue for, rather than a very obvious sort of claim or a report of your own reactions to a text (which you don't have to argue for at all). Remember, when you are producing a reading about a complex literary text like a novel, a poem, or a film the object of your argument will be to illuminate the text, to draw attention to some aspect of the work you think that the text is accomplishing.
Once you have determined the detail or problem or element in a text that you want to draw your reader's attention to and argue about, your opposition will likely consist of those who would focus elsewhere because they don't grasp the importance of your focus, or who would draw different conclusions than you do from your own focus.
Think of your thesis as your paper's spine; it is the thing that holds your argument and your paper together. The thesis names your paper's task, its project, its object, its focus. As you write your papers, it is a very good idea to ask yourself these questions, from time to time: Does this quotation, does this argument, does this paragraph directly support my thesis in some way? If it doesn't you should probably delete it, because this probably means you have gotten off track. If you are drawn repeatedly away from what you have chosen as your thesis, ask yourself whether or not this signals that you really want to argue for some different thesis.
Brainstorm. Take a sheet of paper and in ten minutes or so write down a dozen or so claims you can make about the text you have chosen to write about. Don't worry about whether these claims are "deep" or whether they are "interesting," just write down claims that you think are true about the text.
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How many claims are left? Do any of these claims seem especially interesting to you? Can you imagine how you might argue for some of them in a conversation with somebody who disagreed with you about them? Do some of the claims really say the same thing in different ways? Do they suggest some other claims that might express your actual interests more closely?
You should now have a couple candidates or so for you thesis remaining. Now, for each of these possible thesis claims come up with the strongest or most obvious opposition to each thesis. For example, what would the opposite claim be to the one you are making?
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If the opposition you have come up with seems vague or unintelligent or highly implausible this probably indicates that you need to sharpen up your own initial thesis. Is there a version of your thesis that is more focused and specific that retains the spirit of your claim but which provokes a more interesting opposition?
If the opposition you have written suddenly seems more compelling than the thesis itself this probably indicates that the stakes of your project, or possibly your whole take on the text itself, is different than you initially thought it was. Perhaps what you thought of as opposition to your thesis actually provides you with a stronger thesis and a new direction for your own paper.
Created 9-24-05. Last Modified 9-28-05.
The opinions or statements expressed herein should not be taken as a postion or endorsement of the University of California, Berkeley.
Dale Carrico, dalec@berkeley.edu