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Topic Sentences
Each
body paragraph of your paper builds towards proving one particular
aspect of your thesis, and each of these aspects should be
crystallized into a strong topic sentence.
If
your paper is quite short, these sentences might represent
the main points you mentioned in the blueprint part of your
thesis, but they might each be more specific aspects of one
of those points, particularly if your paper is longer.
Defining your topics
- First and foremost, a topic sentence is a piece of
analysis, NOT summary. Think of it in a similar
manner to how you thought of your thesis; in other words,
an original interpretation based upon the textual evidence
of your source. The first of the following examples illustrates
a statement of fact, rather than an argumentative topic
sentence.
Weak Topic Sentence: "Book Five of Paradise Lost concentrates on the conversation
between Adam and the archangel Raphael.”
Strong Topic Sentence: "Throughout Book Five, Milton utilizes images of gardening and
nourishment to convey man's maturing relationship to the divine."
Relationship
of topics to thesis - Your
topic statements should each provide a solid area of analysis
by which your thesis is true. They should, however, be
more specific than a mere restatement of part of it.
Thesis: "In Journey Through
the Twelve Forests, David Haberman apprehends the Ban-Yatra pilgrimage as a realization of the god Krishna's omnipresence, through separate
realizations of the journey's cyclical nature, the externalization of the divine, and the
relationship between asceticism and pleasure."
Topic Sentence for Second Paragraph: "Throughout the narrative, the physical
relationship of the pilgrim to the natural landscape of
Braj, as well as worshipped
images of Krishna and other deities, reflects the presence of Krishna as an interactive
externality, rather than the occupant of an inaccessible sphere."
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