No subjects are for more specific things
The difference between a subject and a theme is that a subject is just a noun; whereas a theme is a statement (with a subject and a verb). You can infer a theme from details in a story that the author implies. An author almost never says what a theme is.
a theme is like a topic and subject of a theme is more specific about the topic.
The theme is the subject of something.
A subject in literature is a subject such as war, love, or growing old. A theme is an opinion of a character in the work. Readers interpret the theme by analyzing the characters and plot.
The official defetinion is:contrapuntal composition in two or more voices, built on a subject (theme) that is introduced at the beginning in imitation and recurs frequently in the course of the composition.click in the related links box below for the wikipedia article on the fugue.
theme is an entire title and title is a temporary heading
subject
the difference is tht the subject has to do with what its about and the theme is about the conversation
-- subject -- theme
They are related by the means which the author employs to relate them. The two are not inherently related, they can be quite independent. For example the theme of "high noon" is duty. The theme of "Lady Nightengale" is duty. The subject of one is a shoot-em-up western, the subject of the other is a hospital.
The theme is the ongoing plot of the story or the overwhelming appearance of a subject in a setting.
You simply start posting things about a specific subject, fandom, or "theme".