Monday, November 17, 2014

The Hunger Games

The Hunger Games vs. Real World
The Hunger Games, written by Suzanne Collins, is a book written to explain the events that occurred during the annual Hunger Games. The book was not just about explaining the games though. It also brings up many negative aspects and ideals of the human race. Some of those aspects that were thoroughly referenced throughout the book are tyrannical, totalitarian governments and the mistreatment of the people. Katniss, the main protagonist, describes the state of Panem as oppressive and cruel. The 12 districts of Panem are treated harshly by the capitol. They are unable to speak out against the government, aren’t given enough food and necessities, and are of course forced to send tributes to participate in the Hunger Games annually.
Hunting for game, to keep the family alive another day or two.
In the book, Katniss regularly ventures out to the forbidden woods behind fences to hunt food, because the Capitol wouldn’t give enough food to feed the populous. Barely able to support her own family, Katniss describes her District 12 as “The place where you can starve to death in safety” (Collins 7). Katniss also describes how everyone tries to avoid speaking about the district and the Capitol, as this only leads to trouble (Collins 7). She said, “When I was younger, I scared my mother to death the things I would blurt out about District 12, about the people who rule our country, Panem, from the far city called the Capitol. Eventually I understood that this would only lead us to more trouble” (Collins 7). Mistreatment by the government of Panem was a result of a revolt that occurred between the districts and the Capitol. To prevent anything like that from happening again, the government became harsher and manipulative.

The Hunger Games are meant to pose terror to the people from ever acting out against the governments again. The people are manipulated into thinking that the games are for sacrifice and honor to the state. Harsh penalties will be faced for opening your mouth about the games or the rulers of the country.
Katniss Everdeen's sister Primrose, was reaped on the 74th Hunger Games.
In the real world, there are cruel totalitarian governments like the one from Panem. Examples of similar real life totalitarian governments are North Korea, China, the former Soviet Union, and many more. These countries are ruled by tyrannical leaders who oppress, torture, and manipulate the vulnerable populous. Citizens of those countries have little to no human rights and are completely at the mercy of those who govern, just like in the book.
North Korean guards.
The communist regime of North Korea can be regarded as the closest real-life representation of the Hunger Games. Along with the evil government that reigns supreme over the people, North Korea is among the poorest and least advanced countries in the world. According to Joshua Stanton and Sung-Yoon Lee of
The New York Times, with the leaders of that country squandering money on luxury goods and strengthening the military, many of the inhabitants of the state are left struggling to find food and are starving to death in the thousands. They are malnourished, the children have stunted growth, and in the last 2 decades, death from starvation reached the millions in North Korea. The novel gives a fictional, less cruel viewpoint on starvation. The twelve districts struggle to find food to survive through the days. Katniss describes that starvation is not an uncommon rate in her district, and that people can’t work and slowly starve to death. In her own words she states,” Starvation is not an uncommon fate in District 12. Who hasn’t seen the victims? There are older people who can’t work. There are children from a family with too many to feed. Those injured in the mines. Straggling through the streets” (Collins 29). She herself was a victim of starvation, only saved when Peeta Mallark, one of the other protagonists, was willing to feed her. To provide enough for her family, she illegally hunts games and offers to put her name more times in the reaping of the Hunger Games for tesserae, a year’s supply of barely enough food. Katniss quotes, “You can opt to add your name more time in exchange for tesserae. Each tessera is worth a meager year’s supply of grain and oil for one person. You may do this for each of your family members as well” (Collins 14). This is the Capitol trying to lure them into getting chosen for the Games, a sign of a manipulative government.
North Korean tyrant Kim Jong Un and his trusted advisors.
While citizens of North Korea suffer, the communist leaders live the most lavish lifestyle as they can. Their dictator, Kim Jong Un, is said to have spent 1.3 billion dollars on luxury items, and military projects (New York Times). Kim Jong Un lives like a king while his people suffer.
Citizens of District 12.
North Koreans struggle to survive everyday while Kim Jong Un lives a lavish lifestyle.
He lives atop a net worth of five billion dollars while his own people decay with an annual salary of little more than a thousand (Head). In the districts the heavily poor live in horrible conditions. The government mostly ignores the well being of the districts. As described in the novel, the Capitol (the place where the government resides), is a utopian society that is extremely wealthy, technologically advanced, and where fashion and style are key to being relevant (Collins 59).
The spoiled people of the Capitol.
There is a huge gap in the human quality of life between the districts and the capital. The people of the districts are living in slum-like villages and are on the verge of starvation every day, while the upper-class people of the capital live in rich, spacious houses and eat endlessly, even resorting to special liquids to make them vomit and able to eat more. The reality of totalitarian rule is that it brings out the “most selfish” of the aspects of order, where majority of the common people are pawns in the ruling elite’s games to achieve wealth and luxury.
Suffering doesn’t just come from the ignorance of the governments to the common people. As stated earlier, the novel’s Hunger Games were meant for keeping control of the districts. But it also served to the ruling class of the capitol as something they can watch and be entertained with. The games were broadcasted live to everyone in Panem, including the districts. To the Capitol, it was like watching a sport, as the people would keep a close eye on the games, watching every tribute’s move, while also routing for their favorites. The polar opposites were the districts, who broadcast the games as torture and cruelty. The suffering already started before the games. It was a drama already when people of the Capitol were cheering as tributes stepped out of the train that transported them to the ruling city. For Peeta and Katniss, as they leave the train, both were shocked and disturbed at the cheering crowd. Even as death looms among them, the crowd has the audacity to smile and cheer.
Running away from the Cornicopia or just running to the slaughter.
Entertaining the crowd of Rome was difficult.
Katniss describes the crowd as she sees the crowd when first arriving at the Capitol, “I step away from the window, sickened by their excitement, knowing they can’t wait to watch us die” (Collins 59). Their suffering officially began there, as they suffer to hide their fears and weaknesses before the games. In the days of the ancient Roman Empire, tyrants legalized suffering for entertainment.
Fight to the death. From the 2000 film Gladiator.
The most popular brutal events were the gladiator games. Gladiators were mostly enslaved people or prisoners who have little rights and privileges (Futrell 130), very much like the novel’s district citizens who are at the mercy of the Capitol. Much like tributes in the novel, Gladiators engage in battles to the death, always in front of a bloodthirsty crowd. The gladiators’ guides were the magistri, former gladiators with experience in the gladiator games, very much like mentors for the tributes in the novel (Futrell 138). There was an enormous amount of combat training for gladiators, as they exercise for hours on end for years, while also learning how to prepare to die. However, in the Hunger Games, two weeks were only allowed for training and preparing, but they were almost as intense during that time.
In the Hunger Games, popularity was necessary to survive, because it can result in more sponsors giving you the necessities you need during the games. That can ultimately decide your fate in the games. Katniss and Peeta were able to get sponsorship for pretending to be a couple fighting in the games, which made them popular and able to secure sponsors and favorable views. That contributed greatly to their victory in the 74th Hunger Games.

Mentor Haymitch giving a basic advice to Katniss.
Popularity in the Gladiator games was necessary in a different way for the Gladiators. If a gladiator achieves popularity within the games, it serves as a bailout from death. Should one who was loved by the crowd get wounded to the point where they are barely alive and no longer able to fight, the crowd can decide if the gladiator can live or die (Futrell 143). Unlike the Hunger Games, the whole crowd is the sponsor. The majority of the crowd holds lives in their hands.
Emperor Commodus of the Roman Empire - from the 2000 film, Gladiator.
In all, the Hunger Games brings mind what government can do if it isn’t controlled itself, by the vast majority. Brutality, mistreatment, and manipulation prevail in a country where most do not have their human rights and freedoms. Ruling elites live a lavish lifestyle while citizens decay in harsh environments. Having too much power corrupts a society and the Hunger Games clearly portray that. What is also to learn from the novel is the violent nature of humans. Violence and brutality serve as entertainment for some of us in world and leaves a negative mark on the human race.






Works Cited
Collins, Suzanne. The Hunger Games. New York: Scholastic, 2008. Print.
Futrell, Alison. The Roman Games: A Sourcebook. Malden, MA: Blackwell Pub., 2006. Print
Head, Tom. "What Are the Human Rights Violations in North Korea?" About. N.p., n.d. Web. 25 Oct. 2014. <http://civilliberty.about.com/od/internationalhumanrights/p/northkorea101.htm>.
Stanton, Joshua, and Sung-yoon Lee. "Pyongyang’s Hunger Games." The New York Times. The New York Times, 07 Mar. 2014. Web. 27 Oct. 2014. <http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/08/opinion/pyongyangs-hunger-games.html?_r=0>.
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