Comparison Of Dystopia In The Hunger Games And The Hunger Games

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Imagine living in the most undesirable society, a society filled with poverty, disease, and filth, where the government watches, monitors and controls everything you do, a society in which you have no individual choice. A society where anything you think or do against the government can be punishable by isolation, torture, or death. Freedom is inexistent, and personal thought is prohibited. A society where your career and social status are pre-determined and you cannot alter it. And imagine that the government of this society did everything in its power to make you believe that this was the most ideal living situation for you. This is a dystopian society. Citizens in a dystopian society are often brainwashed or too scared to speak up against their government. Many books and novels were compiled with dystopian themes or dystopian societies in mind, and many of these books were inspired by actual facts and individuals. Now this brings up the question; does the dystopian genre reflect real world problems? The way I will be formulating the structure of my statement will be with three different books; Hunger Games, The Giver and 1984. Every single one of these books is set in the future, in which society has drastically changed and the way of life is extremely dreaded.

The Hunger Games is a dystopian trilogy written by Suzanne …show more content…

Common themes found in dystopia include government surveillance, poor living standards, totalitarian regimes, brainwashing, concealing of information, and police brutality. Some dystopian works attempt to bring light to a specific issue by playing it to the extreme while others portray dystopia as a result of a combination of several problems. The Hunger Games features several themes of dystopia, the most prominent likely being the

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