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- From: KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET (Jon L. Campbell)
- Newsgroups: misc.writing
- Subject: Theme?
- Message-ID: <92310.095916KVJLC@ASUACAD.BITNET>
- Date: 5 Nov 92 16:59:16 GMT
- Article-I.D.: ASUACAD.92310.095916KVJLC
- Organization: Arizona State University
- Lines: 37
-
-
- I know this subject has probably been hacked to death, but I
- have been struggling with the concept of theme since reading what
- John Garner wrote in his guide for the beginning writer. He points
- out that stories need a theme if they are to be effective(?), etc.
-
- My problem with this, is that writing a story with a theme implies
- that every story has a moral to be told. Or should have a moral, but
- I have problems with this concept because I believe that the essence of
- truth is chaotic. That life, death, and the pursuit of happiness is
- random and therefore, if fiction imitates life then it to must be a
- random occurence without moral implications. A story of love is only
- a series of sporadic events in which multiple random events are brought
- together by chance. Dick meets Jane at the park, they fall in love and
- through a series of events marry each other. Their chance encounter
- in the park is not a moral passage in time, but characteristic of the
- chaos that occasionally brings unlike events together. What is the
- moral of a love story if the people involved are unknowingly pawns in
- the chaotic scheme of the universe? How would solving a serious of
- violent, and completely random, murders involve a moral theme?
- If one is to imply that love, murder, hate, jealousy, or any of the
- other human qualities can be packaged into a neat little bundle and
- explained in the context of a theme, they're wrong. There is no theme
- to explain the serial killer in todays society, nor is there any way
- to unlock the deep physiological torture of chaotic rationale and say
- that murder doesn't pay or that you'll be caught eventually. There is
- too much criminal evidence in the FBI's archives suggesting that mutiple
- murders by strangers is not something that can fit into a moral theme.
- I can't believe that people still write from the perspective of the
- theme in their stories. I can't imagine why anyone would try to
- influence the reader with their idea of what is moral and what isn't.
-
- What do you think? Does anyone out there still use a theme in their stories?
-
-
- Jon -- If there is a moral to this, I would reckon that it happened
- by chance.
-