The Hunger Games By Suzanne Collins

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A Fire of Revolution "There is no week nor day nor hour when tyranny may not enter upon this country, if the people lose their roughness and spirit of defiance" (Walt Whitman). In the novel The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, Katniss is a young girl from District 12, who lives in a society which finds great entertainment in the organized killing of children. These bloodbaths are constructed by the Capitol into an event known as the Hunger Games. In the Hunger Games, kids are thrown into a huge arena and forced to fight to the death. Katniss`s younger sister Prim is chosen to participate in the Hunger Games but Katniss volunteers to take her place as tribute. Over the course of the Hunger Games and the events that proceed it, Katniss changes from being impulsive and feeling impotent into a rational revolutionist, who quietly defies the capitol and takes a stand for what is right. At the start of the story, Katniss`s passive political attitude is the result of years of the Capitols oppression. In one scene, Katniss is in the middle of the woods and her friend Gale starts to rant about how the Capitol is manipulating them. “His rage seems pointless to me, although I never say so. It`s not that I don’t agree with him. I do. But what good is yelling about the Capitol in the middle of the woods? It doesn’t change anything” (Collins 14). From this we can see that Katniss does have an opinion of the capitol but she finds no point in trying to act upon it. Her main goal in life is to provide for her sister Prim and her mother. However, later on while in the Games her mindset and attitude completely change. “It`s the Capitol I hate, for doing this to all of us. Gale`s voice is in my head his ravings against the Capitol no longer pointless,... ... middle of paper ... ...e within her are for the most part very obvious, especially the changes concerning her level of political involvement. By the end of the book, she is no longer passive toward the horrors of the Capitol. Instead, she takes steps to defy them, to show the Capitol that they don`t own her. We also see a huge difference in the way she approaches things. Her original impulsive tendencies are not as prominent toward the end of the story and her ability to make rational decisions has greatly improved. The Hunger Games are responsible for the majority of this change but her friends also play a crucial role in shaping her into the strong defiant character that she is in the end. The old has gone, the new has come. Katniss is lit with a fire that gives her the strength and determination necessary defy the capitol and make a difference in her broken world, a fire of revolution.

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