Theme Analysis, Only for Quality!
Theme in Fiction What is theme?
● Theme is always a complete sentence. ● Theme is an arguable claim made by a story. ● Theme is the point the story is trying to make. ● Theme connects fiction to our lived human experiences. ● Theme is a big idea, a universal statement, an argument or claim about one of life’s big
ideas.
What isn’t theme? ● Theme can never be one word: love, friendship, dogs, or tacos are big ideas, but they’re
not claims. ● Theme can never be summary: what happens in the story reveals the meaning, but the
theme is universal and can be applied to your life and mine. ● Theme is not an easy lesson: “listen to your parents,” or “be nice to people” are good
ideas, but they aren’t complex enough to drive literature.
What are some examples of theme? ● Painful experiences can make a person stronger. ● The past will always impact the present and future. ● Some family bonds are not worth fighting for. ● Love requires sacrifice. ● Adulthood is a rewarding burden. ● Independence requires responsibility. ● Hope is powerful, but also dangerous.
Things to remember when you write about theme: ● Why is more important than what. Identifying a symbol is only important if you also
explain what it means and how it relates to the theme. ● Think about what the story seems to value and promote? What gets rewarded? What is
learned? ● Explain and analyze how a theme is shown, what in the story reveals the theme or
relates to it.