Where Do Themes Come From?
If you are a writer, or blogger, finding
themes for you works is crucial. In order to maintain a steady flow of material
is the hardest task any one can handle. It not just what your themes are, but
it is also about where and how to find them. I have decided to share this
article with you, so that you too can make use of the wisdom in it, in order to
fulfill the call of your destiny—that is—writing.
Image Courtesy: Stephen King |
Practicing
the craft of writing every day is as important as reading books to engage the
imaginative and artistic faculty on a daily basis. Daily writing tones and prunes
the skills of a writer to perfection. The internet has no shortage in the
number of ‘How-to’ pages. They will tell you how to write a story, a book, a
love letter, or even a computer code. Perhaps, there is a ‘How-to’ page on how
to find themes for your stories, or articles, or poems as well. I am not
concerned about those sites, here. However, what I do feel concerned about is a
website that might tell you where to find your themes.
Image Courtesy: Google |
If
they had a webpage that drives you through all the mysterious processes, the
alchemy of transforming the mundane into the sublime, I am done with. The theme
or the main subject of any literary work is the key element in this alchemy. Without
a central theme to blow life into it, a story, article, or poem is just a bunch
of words, connected at the whim of a lunatic. Art relies mostly on not just the
medium of artistry, but also, for the most part on what is being told through
the medium. And this article is all about finding themes. So if there exists a
webpage that tells you about where to find them, I had better shoot myself.
Where
do themes come from? Some say, they come from within the writer. Stephen King
has been reported suggesting the same idea, multiple times. Occasionally, he
even mentions visions as the triggers of some of his stories, Duma Key for example. For John Grisham,
themes mostly come to him from courtrooms or even news reports. A Time to Kill, was based on a courtroom
event, he witnessed first handedly. As far as I understand, there are both
external and internal factors triggering the development of thematic alignment
of sensory experiences.
Image Courtesy: J. K. Rowling |
What
is the ‘thematic alignment of sensory experiences’? In order to answer this
question, let us first drop the pretention that we are not discussing the
situation of an aspiring writer. As a fact we are. The difference between a
person attempting to pay his bills (or at least dreaming to perform towards
this direction) and a person who had already realized his reality and went to work
at some office is that the writer person must keep an eye on every experience
in life.
Silly
or serious, the writer’s mind would keep registering them with all the charm
and fantasy possible, attached with it. He or she would classify some events, thoughts,
or realization as good for fantasy or horror, detective, or expressionistic or
abstract work of literary art. Every sensory experience, thus transformed into
themes, serve as the source of richness in creative writing.
Image Courtesy: Harlan Coben |
In
daily writing practice, the themes and pictures our mind has captured from the
day-to-day flux of events in the mundane cycle might sound too grand and
ambitious. They could be themes for masterpieces, however, in daily writing, we
cannot focus much on a research based, or outline based writing. (Let us remind
ourselves once again, we are not talking about Dean Koontz or Harlan Coben.
This article is to the aspiring writer or the student of writing)
Before
one writes a successful novel or a book of short stories, or poems or
non-fiction, one must master the craft. Daily writing is all about that first
step. Daily writing themes need not be deep philosophical ideas, or existential
crises, or dark mystery, or horror classic. Daily writing could be about the
very basics of daily life. This is where those web pages with writing prompts
come into play. Writing prompts are immensely useful in maintaining a healthy
daily-worship of your muse.
Image Courtesy:www.downthewriterspath.com |
Some
people might find it a bit difficult to follow a prompt generated by another
mind, another person, or web page. Often, the student might feel put off to
some extent at this point. They think their inability to perform well upon the
theme or sentence fragment they found on the writing prompt page means their
writing faculty is defective. Such is the nature and manner self-prejudice
always attacks an individual. To be able to follow only one’s own inner call is
not a defect. If you follow someone else’s suggestions and find it difficult to
move on without checking with one’s own inner voice, you are one of the most
normal and able person I have ever seen. For people with a strong self-call and
inner motivation, finding a prompt oneself seems the best strategy. For this
purpose, he or she can search through a library and find prompts from
dictionaries, encyclopedias, and history books, according to once own
convenience.
You can try my book: Here
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