Motif

    In literature, a motif or motive is a recurring element or theme that has symbolic significance in the story. Motifs
    are recurring structures, contrasts, or literary devices that can help to develop and inform the text’s major
    themes. The motif can be an idea, an object, a place, or a statement. The green light in The Great Gatsby and
    the repeated statement, "My father said that the reason for living is getting ready to stay dead," in William
    Faulkner's As I Lay Dying are examples of motifs. A motif can be something that re-occurs to develop the theme
    in a novel: In the beginning of To Kill a Mockingbird the children are told never to shoot a mockingbird because
    mockingbirds do nothing in their life but sing for people. At the end of the novel the theme of senseless killing is
    re-visited when Mr. Underwood talks of Tom's death.

    Motifs are common in poetry.

    A motif differs from a theme in that a theme is an idea set forth by a text, where a motif is a recurring element
    which symbolizes that idea. The motif can also be more like the central idea behind the theme, such as courage
    or loyalty.

    Also known (redundantly) as a recurrent motif.

P
o
e
t
r
y