‘I don’t write about adolescence’, said Suzanne
Collins, discussing her Hunger
Games novels in arecent interview.
‘I write about war. For adolescents.’
Regardless of the intended audience of The Hunger Games, its appeal
has been much broader. The first novel has sold an estimated 10million copies
worldwide and is now as likely to be read by adults as adolescents. Following
the pattern of the Harry
Potter novels,
respectable-looking covers have been produced so adults don’t look out of place
reading the books during the daily commute. Critics gush about The Hunger Games offering ‘attractions that many grown-up novels
don’t’. The film adaptation has proven to be one of the most successful films
of recent years.
It’s not hard to see why. The books are fast-paced
thrillers, riffing with a now extremely familiar conceit – a sci-fi dystopia
where a group of people are placed in an arena to do brutal combat, with their
every move being filmed for a reality TV show called ‘The Hunger Games’. It’s
effectively The Running Man with hot teenagers, a
made-for-Hollywood version of the Japanese hit, Battle Royale.
But far greater claims are being made for The Hunger Games than its entertainment value. Much of the praise centres around the strong female lead, 16-year-old Katniss Everdeen, widely lauded as a twenty-first-century feminist icon. Growing up in abject poverty with her mother and sister, and learning to hunt in the forest in order to ward off starvation, Katniss boldly volunteers as a Hunger Games ‘tribute’ to replace her younger sister, who was selected by lottery and would have faced certain death in the arena. By the third novel, she goes on to be the face of a ‘revolution’ against the oppressors in the Capitol.
Despite all of the gushing about Katniss’ emerging as
a ‘revolutionary folk hero’ and a ‘great role model for girls’, one of the most striking things is the
lack of subjectivity she exerts though much of the novels. She’s tough, sure,
and is a whizz with a bow and arrow, able to consistently take out squirrels by
firing arrows through their eyes. She proves as effective in mortal combat with
other contestants too.
But good survival instincts aside, Katniss’ actions
are more often than not determined almost entirely by circumstance and the will
of others. From the preparations for her first Hunger Games onwards, she is
told what to say, told what to wear and is usually the object of the plans of
others that she lacks all but a vague awareness of. From the dramatic fiery
costumes produced by designer Cinna, to her fellow tribute Peeta professing
undying love to make her appear desirable to the audience, and the gifts
obtained for her by mentor Haymitch, the appeal and success of this remarkably
cold and sullen young girl is created by others, not herself. Her life is
repeatedly saved due to the goodwill of others who see her as an important
symbol, less so due to her own actions. At times Katniss struggles to
understand why she has the powerful impact on others that she does. As the
reader sees things from her perspective, rather than the conjured image of her
that is presented on the TV screen, it can be equally hard to fathom.
Even when the rebels recognise she needs to be allowed
to be spontaneous when filmed to make a convincing bit of propaganda, she still
acts within carefully-staged boundaries. Where there is a broader strategy –
such as the escape from the Quarter Quell in the second novel, Catching Fire, or the
rebellions in the third – she seems to be kept out of the loop as much as
possible. ‘Katniss the Mockingjay’ (nick-named after a hybrid bird that thrives
in this dystopian world, against the intentions of the rulers) is a carefully
constructed symbol of the uprisings, but fails to become a revolutionary
subject herself. (She is also, it must be said, often ruthlessly instrumental
in her dealings with others, to the point of appearing almost inhuman. Even her
two adoring suitors, who she is decidedly uninterested in, are led to conclude
that who she will ultimately choose will depend upon who she decides she ‘can’t
survive without’.) Is being a pin-up - albeit a ‘revolutionary’ one - really
something girls should aspire to emulate?
Not, however, that the rebellions that take place are
‘revolutionary’ in any meaningful way. Despite numerous attempts to give them credence, the politics of The Hunger Games is so crude it could even make an
Occupy protester blush. In many ways, the The
Hunger Games is to
contemporary protest groups such as Occupy what James Cameron’s Avatar was to the environmentalist movement: a
distillation of their prejudices presented in a fictional world, where the
complexities of the real one don’t need to figure. It’s little surprise so
many, not just adolescents, find such a simpler world appealing.
The world of The
Hunger Games is a post-apocalyptic
one, taking place in what was America after civilisation has been destroyed by
climate change, ‘the droughts, the storms, the fires, the encroaching seas that
swallowed up so much of the land, the brutal war for what little sustenance
remained’. Now the ‘one per cent’ and ‘99 per cent’ are dramatically polarised.
There are those who live in the technologically-advanced Capitol, waited upon
by servants, with ample leisure time to watch the Hunger Games, gobble
themselves sick at banquets, dress up in garish attire and to modify their
bodies in sometimes hideous ways. And there are those living in the districts,
who have barely enough to eat, and work long hours undertaking manual labour,
slaving away for a subsistence wage. Any show of insolence is brutally
repressed and, to keep them in line, each district is forced to offer up two of
its children each year to compete in the Hunger Games.
Given such a black-and-white set up, it speaks to what
must be Collins’s inherent cynicism that when the uprising does come, it ends
up a case of ‘meet the new boss same as the old boss’ (until an intervention by
Katniss leads to a slightly-less-bad boss being put in its place, but even then
only by chance). The rebel leaders are consistently portrayed with suspicion
and are shown to be even more brutal, manipulative and ruthless than the
previous rulers. And while there is talk of liberation struggles in other
districts, all the reader is usually presented with is the struggle to use
Katniss to produce effective propaganda that will incite and inspire the
masses. There is also no development of any sense of what should replace the
existing society – certainly all Katniss aspires towards is a quiet life at one
with nature hunting in the woods. That the concluding comments by former
games-maker Plutarch in the final book go unchallenged suggests that Collins
may share a similar misanthropic worldview: ‘Collective thinking is usually
short-lived. We’re fickle, stupid beings with poor memories and a great gift
for self-destruction.’
For all the talk of its strong feminist characters,
and important political messages, such cynicism and misanthropy pervades the Hunger Games trilogy. It may be true, as many have
claimed, that it is a political allegory for our time. But that
is not necessarily a positive thing.
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