Zusammenfassung der Ressource
“My Mother Enters the Work Force” by
Rita Dove
- Author Background
- Rita Dove, b. 1952, Akron, OH.
- 2nd African-American to
receive the Pulitzer Prize for
Poetry. (1987)
- In 1993, she was named U.S.
poet laureate, becoming the
youngest and first African-
American. She served in that
position from 1993 – 1995.
- Technically, first to serve in role
since the name was changed to
Poet Laureate.
- She was one of the first poet
laureates to treat the role as a
reason to advocate for the
arts.
- Dove is currently the
Commonwealth Professor of
English at the University of
Virginia in Charlottesville.
- Poem Background
- Published in "On the Bus with
Rosa Parks", a book of poems
published in 1999.
- Dove was known for mixing
personal and historical
elements into her poetry.
- Listen to Dove in an
interview about this poetry
collection.
- Poem Breakdown
- Poem Analysis
- Structure
- 27 lines
- 4 irregular
stanzas
- Last stanza
is a
non-rhyming
couplet
- No rhymes
- Irregular
structure,
paragraph-style
- Perspective
- This poem is written
from the perspective of a
girl talking about all of
the ‘work’ it took just for
her mother to enter the
work force.
- Poetic Devices
- Simile
- “velvet deep
as a forest.”
(Line 15)
- Metaphor
- “paid for by a
lucky sign”
- Her mother
was able to go
to school,
because she
noticed a sign
for potential
work.
- Imagery
- Sound
imagery –>
constant
movement
related to
constant
work/effort
- Locomotive
whir of the
treadle
machine
- “clack and
chatter” of the
office
machines
- Personification
- “And now and now sang
the treadle,” (Line 16)
- “all morning at the office
machines, / their clack
and chatter” (Lines 19 &
20)
- The machines are so
familiar that they have
human-like
characteristics.
- Hyperbole
- “that would go on
forever” in
reference to her
mother’s efforts to
graduate business
school and become
a quick, perfect
typist.
- Poem Themes
- Mother/Daughter Relationship
- The female speaker is looking
back on her mother’s life.
- There is a certain pride when
she speaks about her
mother’s efforts, especially
her excellence at the
alterations shop.
- Work
- The mother
cannot simply
enroll in business
school.
- She has to take on
all types of work
to be able to
afford the tuition.
- This poem
describes all the
work that women
might go through if
they want to get an
education and
“enter the work
force” with an office
job.
- Perfection/Precision
- There are parallels
between the work
the mother does
with alterations and
her education as a
typist in business
school.
- She must perfect
her typing just like
she has perfected
her ability to alter
sleeves.