A motif is like a repeated song in a story, and a theme is what that song is about, it’s the big idea behind all those repeats.
Imagine you're building a tower with blocks. Every time you stack a red block on top of another red block, that’s your motif, the pattern you’re using to build. But if you say, "I'm making a tall, strong tower," that's your theme, it's what all those red blocks are helping you achieve.
What Makes a Motif Different from a Theme
- A motif is something that happens over and over in the story, like a character saying the same line every time they're upset, or a symbol appearing again and again.
- A theme is more like the reason behind those repeats, it’s the message or feeling you get from seeing that motif so many times.
So if you're reading a book where a clock always ticks when something bad happens, that ticking clock is your motif, and maybe the theme is "time is running out."
It's like having a favorite song that plays every time you feel happy, that’s your motif, and the idea that happiness makes you want to sing is your theme.
Examples
- Themes are the bigger messages in a book, like 'love conquers all.'
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See also
- What is theme?
- How Do You Define Story Vs Plot?
- Analogies, Metaphors, and Similes. What’s the Difference?
- Are Short Stories Good Practice for Novels?
- How Does Lyric : Form of poetry Work?