Always Learning. Always Writing.
RSS icon Email icon Home icon
  • I Believe in Theme

    Posted on January 28th, 2010 jean 4 comments

    Theme: a unifying or dominant idea, motif, etc., as in a work of art.–dictionary.com

    I know. <Ugh.>

    All those stories we’ve worked so hard on have to have a general message or statement about the world, people, or events, aka ‘theme,’ hidden in them somewhere, right? Right?

    That’s how I feel about some of my stories. However, the story I have been working on since November has a definite theme. In fact, it has about two or three, but the major theme is not only important, but purposeful. It has become the crucial thread that holds all the mini stories in this novel together.

    Because my story has a plethora of characters and subplots, I need to work that theme to my advantage. I need every scene and every chapter to highlight that theme, and for that theme to giving meaning to the story’s events. This theme needs to illuminate the ramifications of all those character actions and reactions. In short, it needs to be the PB in the PB & J sandwich.

    Tonight I watched The Tooth Fairy (movie) and it got me thinking about theme. I suppose that could be because it’s a kids movie and they like to beat the theme over the audience’s head. Which, actually, was kind of handy for me who has been ruminating about theme lately.

    The major theme in The Tooth Fairy movie was believe. Yup. You probably could have guessed that one! BUT, it was for all the major characters. Ooh. Tricky.

    Here’s the rundown on how the theme played out for all the characters…

    Hockey player Thompson dude–needs to believe in his dreams again
    Tooth Fairy guy without wings–needs to believe he can overcome the obstacle between him and his dreams
    The head Tooth Fairy lady–she believes she can change Thompson and make him believe again
    The mother/girlfriend–she believes her son and boyfriend will develop a true relationship
    The son–needs to believe in himself
    The daughter–she believes in the tooth fairy

    Writing this out, I noticed something–all the men in the movie need to believe and all the women already do. Interesting. Is there another theme hiding in there? Maybe. Or maybe I’m just looking too deep. I mean, the movie did dress a professional wrestler in a pink tutu for goodness sake.

    So, did this theme work? Did it pull it all together? Did it give the story unity? Yes, yes, and yes. The beliefs that the women had needed to be proved correct and the men needed to start believing. Once that all happened, everyone was able to live happily ever after. Awww.

    How about you? Is theme something that happens intentionally in your stories, or is it a byproduct–you hope–that you discover afterwards? Do you think some genres use theme more than others?