Motifs
Learn about motifs and how they can point you towards a literary work's theme. The ability to recognize patterns is a real world skill, a requirement in most careers and necessary in adult life in general. Examples are taken from the novel Fahrenheit 451 by Ray Bradbury. Please consider supporting my work at / mistersato411 Find me on Twitter @mistersato411

▶︎
Motifs in Film

▶︎
What makes a poem … a poem? - Melissa Kovacs

▶︎
"What is Literature?": A Literary Guide for English Students and Teachers

▶︎
Why should you read James Joyce's "Ulysses"? - Sam Slote

▶︎
Harvard Professor Explains The Rules of Writing — Steven Pinker

▶︎
1986: How to Spot the Upper Class | That's Life! | BBC Archive

▶︎
Hamilton and Motifs: Creating Emotional Paradoxes

▶︎
Domains, Motifs and Turns (Lecture 3)

▶︎
Motifs in Literature

▶︎
What is a motif? Motif examples from well-known films.

▶︎
How to Find a Theme

▶︎
What is Theme — 5 Ways to Layer Theme into a Screenplay

▶︎
Show, Don't Tell Writing Technique | EasyTeaching

▶︎
Everything you always wanted to know about characterization

▶︎
What is Hamartia — The Secret to Writing a Tragic Flaw

▶︎
"What is a Motif?": A Literary Guide for English Students and Teachers

▶︎
Symbols and symbolism

▶︎
Writing Subtext — The Secret to Writing What's Under the Surface

▶︎
Fred Astaire Refused to Believe Audrey Hepburn Can Dance — Until She Proved Every Expert There Wrong

▶︎
