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Dramatica Theory Book
Chapter
12: The Elements of Structure -- Theme
What Exactly Is
Theme?
It seems every author
is aware of theme, but try to find one who can define it! Most will
tell you theme has something to do with the mood or feel of a story.
But how does that differ from genre? Others will say that theme
is the message of the story. Some will put forth that theme is the premise
of a story that illustrates the results of certain kinds of behavior.
Taking each of these a bit farther, a story's mood or feel might be
"anger". A message might be "nuclear power plants are
bad". A premise could be "greed leads to self-destruction."
Clearly each of these might show up in the very same story, and each
has a somewhat thematic feel to it. But just as certainly, none of them
feels complete by itself. This is because each is just a different angle
on what theme really is.
In fact, theme is perspective. Perspective is relationship. Theme describes
the relationship between what is being looked at and from where
it is being seen. This is why theme has traditionally been so hard to
describe. It is not an independent thing like plot or character, but
is a relationship between plot and character.
As a familiar example, think of the old adage about three blind men
trying to describe an elephant. Each is like a character in a story,
and their investigation of the beast is like the plot. One, feeling
the tail comments, "It is long and thin like a snake." Another,
feeling the ear replies, "No, it is wide and flat like a jungle
leaf." The final investigator feels the leg and retorts, "You
are both wrong! It is round and stout like a tree." How each of
those men felt about the elephant, how they understood
it, depended upon his point of view, and the fact that it was an elephant.
It is also true, that had another animal been the object of study, the
perspective would have changed as well.
Where we are looking from are the four points of view represented
by the four throughlines (Objective Story, Main Character, Obstacle
Character, and Subjective Story). In stories, what we are looking
at is the problem that the Story Mind is considering. So, to truly understand
perspective (and therefore theme) we must be able to accurately describe
the nature of the story's problem, and then see how its appearance changes
when seen from each different point of view.
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