Hello,
I often encounter the advice that, when developing a main theme for a story, one should begin with a core truth and then invert it into a falsehood that the main character (MC) believes until their pivotal "ah-ha" moment.
In my novel, a key theme is "You can always find light in the darkness."
However, this theme is not explored through the MC, but rather through the initial antagonist (who ends up being the MC’s love interest). This character, a ruler grappling with anger and sadness due to a traumatic event that befell her people, embodies the theme by being consumed by darkness instead of finding light.
My questions are:
Thank you in advance
I often encounter the advice that, when developing a main theme for a story, one should begin with a core truth and then invert it into a falsehood that the main character (MC) believes until their pivotal "ah-ha" moment.
In my novel, a key theme is "You can always find light in the darkness."
However, this theme is not explored through the MC, but rather through the initial antagonist (who ends up being the MC’s love interest). This character, a ruler grappling with anger and sadness due to a traumatic event that befell her people, embodies the theme by being consumed by darkness instead of finding light.
My questions are:
- Is it acceptable for the theme to primarily unfold through a character other than the first-person protagonist?
- Additionally, how might I effectively weave the MC into this thematic development?
Thank you in advance