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ELA 5: Most Popular Themes 226 Views


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Description:

Make way, these themes are popular. Like, really popular. So popular they don't talk to us anymore.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:04

[Coop and Dino singing]

00:13

Oliver Twist…is bummed. No, it’s not because he’s an orphan and

00:17

doesn’t know who his parents are. No, it’s not because he’s half-starving. [Oliver twist walks up to a store entrance and the sign is closed]

00:21

It’s because…he can’t figure out what the themes are in his story.

00:24

It’s a hard-knock life, huh? Fortunately for Oliver, it shouldn’t be

00:27

too tough for him to figure out the themes that Charles Dickens had in mind when he put [Charles puts his hand in a jar of themes]

00:31

his story to paper. There are some things that keep showing up

00:34

in literature, which makes them easy to spot. For example, “imagination can change the

00:39

world.” Or, “we get by in life thanks to the kindness [Hand placing sticky notes to a table]

00:42

of strangers.” Or, “putting your drink directly on the

00:44

table without using a coaster can result in serious injury.” [Mother's head releases steam and her face turns red]

00:48

Okay…maybe that last one is just something we remember our mother saying…

00:52

In any case, to think about themes, a reader just needs to think about the conceptual words

00:56

that seem to keep repeating in a story. The words that repeat at key points in a story [A paragraph on a piece of paper beside a pepsi can]

01:01

are key to this process— like imagination and kindness.

01:04

Of course, themes are not always quite so… on the nose. [A bee with fear on it's body lands on a girls nose]

01:07

If you keep seeing words like belief, optimism and expectation…

01:11

…well, they might be technically different words, but they’re all hinting at a theme

01:15

of “hope.” If you come across the words gloom, misery

01:19

and anguish during the important scenes… …there just might be a heavy “despair”

01:23

theme running through the narrative. We’ll take the first one, please… [Boy and girl working in a coffee shop]

01:26

Once you think you’ve tracked down a potential theme…

01:28

…ask yourself how that word relates to the characters and the plot.

01:31

Then, think about what the writer seems to be saying about it.

01:35

If the theme is “hope”…is he saying that…hope springs eternal? Or that there’s [Hope elevating up to the clouds]

01:39

no hope for our future? Or that we should all name our daughters “Hope”? [Pregnant girl holding a baby and father walks in]

01:43

Finding the theme is just the beginning…

01:45

…nailing down the author’s opinion of that theme is another story entirely. [Hammer nailing down the word opinion]

01:49

Certain themes tend to keep popping up, because they are universal.

01:53

In other words, they’re relevant to just about everyone…just about everywhere…

01:56

and in just about every time period. It doesn't matter if you’re a little kid

02:00

in ancient Rome or an adult in modern-day South America. [A kid dressed in Ancient Rome clothing and a modern-day man]

02:03

There are some things about being human that we all share…

02:06

…and there are endless ways to tell stories that use these universal themes. [Man reading a boy a bedtime story]

02:10

So, Oliver…any luck? Social Classes…Poverty…Criminality…

02:14

Hopelessness… Wow. You’re really in an “upper”, aren’t you, kid? [Oliver drawing graffiti on a brick wall]

02:17

Looks like Oliver has successfully identified some of his themes.

02:20

Too bad it didn’t cheer him up much…

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