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Playing Games: Governmental Influence and Personal Assertion in Suzanne Collins' 'The Hunger Games' Series

Posted on:2014-04-06Degree:M.AType:Thesis
University:Minnesota State University, MankatoCandidate:Geistfeld, Benjamin JFull Text:PDF
GTID:2457390005489022Subject:Literature
Abstract/Summary:
This thesis explores the relationship between The Hunger Games protagonist Katniss Everdeen and the two governments, one led by President Snow and the other led by President Coin, with which she interacts. In my first chapter, I argue that Presidents Snow and Coin both try to influence Katniss to follow their own agendas by dictating certain social conditions to her through laws, educational curricula, and state-sponsored industries. Each President carefully designs these conditions to support their own agendas rather than the agendas of the citizens they govern. I use Louis Althusser's theory of ideology and ideological state apparatuses and Michel Foucault's theory of discipline and punishment as frameworks within which to discuss the conditions which each President dictates to his or her citizens. In my second chapter, I argue that Katniss' most successful rebellions are the ones which reject the conditions that the Presidents try to impose on her and substitute Katniss' own conditions in their place. The path which Katniss follows in the series has been established by scholars studying other contemporary young adult novels, and this thesis seeks to situate Collins' The Hunger Games series within that growing field of research.
Keywords/Search Tags:Games, Hunger
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