"The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" Theme: Violence Doesn't Solve Problems
In "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" by Rod Serling, one of the main themes is "Violence doesn't solve problems". A scene that represents this theme is when Charlie shoots the dark figure, thinking it's the monster, but it's Pete Van Horn. This shows that because Charlie tried to solve a problem with violence and killed an innocent person (pg.82-83). Another scene that represents this theme is when Charlie's lights turned on and everyone chases him, throws rocks, smashes windows, and accuses him of being the monster. This demonstrates that they accuse everyone and uses violence, which hurts everyone (pg.84). This last scene also represents the theme, when the whole group turns on each other and blames each other, leading to them hurting and killing each other. This scene shows that everyone is being violent and it doesn't solve anyone's problem, they are just killing themselves with this type of choice (pg.85-86). The main theme for "The Monsters Are Due on Maple Street" by Rod Serling is "Violence doesn't solve problems".
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