The coming of age story template has been around for thousands of years, and has stayed the same throughout those years. The template has not died despite it’s seemingly eternal existence. For example, the novels ‘Great Expectations’ and ‘The Hunger Games’ are vastly similar. Although the subjects are totally different, they are the same. From the plot to the character relationships, there are glaring similarities between the two.…
When an author picks up a pen and paper and begins to articulate his/her thoughts, there is only one objective in mind, which is to deliver a consequential message. An author will not write a piece of text without a meaning to go along with the purpose. If there is no meaning being generated, then the text will have no value. The type of form that one may use depends on how one would like to execute the purpose of the text. The reader will not understand what the text means without knowing what the purpose of the text is.…
Dystopian literature can be very similar between different pieces of writing even though they may not seem alike each other at first. Many dystopian books are different and seem like that once you have finished reading them, but once you analyse them and look deeper you can realise how they are very much alike in many areas. William Golding and Suzanne Collins both use internal and external conflicts to present a bleak warning of the future; this is shown similarly in their novels “Lord of the Flies” and “The Hunger Games” Many characters in both of these novels often struggle with making difficult decisions; this is an internal conflict. In “The Hunger Games” Katniss has to decide whether to run to the cornucopia or run for the forest like her mentor has told her to do, she is having a hard time deciding because it could mean the difference between her winning or losing the hunger games. In “The Lord Of The Flies”…
Haymitch is her main supernatural aid. He gives her advice on how to win and also goes to the capitol to get her sponsors for the game. He is constantly there to help her survive. Next, Katniss will have to cross the first threshold. Crossing this threshold happens when the hero enters unfamiliar territory, this is also where conflicts will begin.…
Hunger Games, Star Wars, and Ender’s Game have both similarities and differences in their approach to ‘Call to Adventure’, ‘Refusal’, and ‘Crossing the Threshold’ in the Hero’s Journey. Their ‘Call to Adventure’ all consist of one person coming and either asking something of the hero or heroine or the hero or heroine offers to do something for the person who showed up. For Hunger Games, Katniss offers to enter the Hunger Games instead of Prim. In Star Wars, Obi-Wan Kenobi asks Luke Skywalker if he wants to come with him to defeat the Dark Side.…
Some books are different but they can also be very similar. The book “The Lottery” wrote by Shirley Jackson is about a rural farming community that is forced to have a drawing every year to choose who is stoned to death as a sacrifice to bay for the other villagers sins. The book “The Hunger Games” wrote by Suzanne Collins is about twelve different districts have an annual reaping every year. One boy and one girl are chosen from each district and all twenty-four people go head to head in a battle to the death. At the end of the reaping there is only one victor left to be crowned but this year was different because the main protagonist made them change the rules to where there are two victors if they are from the same district and are they only two left alive.…
The Day Rue Had Not been Killed I’m going to be expressing my thoughts about, how if Rue had survived the Hunger Games and was not killed. I’m going to explain what I believe occurred and what Rue did to survive and even win the seventy-fourth Hunger Games. Katniss just found Rue caught in a net screaming out her name, she untied her and when she stood up Rue shoves Katniss out of the way and jumping out of the way herself, because she saw someone who threw a spear. It just missed them both, however Katniss quickly shot him in his chest. “That was too close” Rue said Katniss replied “That was the boy from district 1”.…
The Hunger Games are supposed to serve as a reminder of the revolution and ensure peace. However, in reality the Hunger Games is a violent bloodbath designed to promote fear. The protagonist, Katniss, volunteers as tribute for the twelfth district to protect her sister. As she progresses through the game she provides hope because she challenges the traditional roles of the tributes when she outperforms the wealthier districts and helps another tribute. President Snow sees Katniss as a threat on the Tyrannical system and believes it could lead to another revolt.…
When comparing the universes in which Anne of Green Gables and The Hunger Games exist, it is easy to see that the former takes place in a smaller, much more contained environment, whereas the latter inhabits a more expansive and far-reaching world. Despite these contrasting settings, the key element that the two universes both commonly share is the concept of different groups of people, and the varying power dynamics between them. Although utilized in different manners, Collins and Montgomery both enlist the help of food to emphasize and illuminate these power dynamics between characters. In The Hunger Games, Collins introduces Panem, a nation established in a post-apocalyptic world composed of twelve districts; each with a varying degree…
While both are different stories there are major similarities that emerge throughout their journeys. Some of the similarities…
The Hunger Games trilogy is a story about media manipulation and the effects it can have on the people who are subject to the images and voices they hear through the media. The story revolves around a young girl named Katniss Everdeen and the dystopian society she lives in. This society is in the country of Panem which is North America in the future. Which has now been taken over by a tyrannical dictatorship that has a tight control over its people, who have been divided up into 12 districts that are governed by The Capitol. The way in which The Capitol have gained this control is through fear tactics and media manipulation.…
The myth of Theseus is suspected to have been written sometime around 100 AD and is considered a Greek myth. The true date of this myth has not been determined since most were passed down by word of mouth. Greek mythology is full of stories about mortals battling mythical beast with strength or intellect. I will be using the Carl Jung method to analyze this myth through the use of Archetypes. Carl Jung was a Swedish psychiatrist that was born in 1875.…
In the Hunger Games, the most important similarities the movie shared with the book was making Peeta initiate the idea of him and Katniss being lovers. This is so significant because, without this, most of the main events in the book and movie would never have taken place. For one, this angle would have left Katniss to be just another face in the crowd, not making her stand out, which also meant fewer sponsors, decreasing her chances of survival. However, the most important reason for this is because Katniss would have left Peeta to die when he needed her the most and she would not have been able to plant the small seeds of defiance against the capital. In the movie and novel, the games take a surprising turn when an announcement goes out that…
Jack Woodford once said, “Characterization is an action that flows out of action and dialogue.” As a writer back in the 30’s and 40’s Woodford wrote an extraordinary amount of non-fiction, so he knows what it takes to be a well-liked character in either a story or a movie. Whether it’s being a hero in a movie, or a sacrifice from a small village, these are two things that Katniss Everdeen and Tess Hutchinson had to endure throughout their life. The life that these two characters lived are what formed them into who they are in their story. Although both of those characters seem different, both Katniss and Tessie Hutchinson display a tremendous amount of the same characteristics.…
Everybody faces challenges, but not everybody can handle what life throws their way. In the dystopian worlds of “The Hunger Games” by Suzanne Collins and William Golding’s “Lord of the Flies”, both authors explore the lives of young and naïve teenagers, experiencing dangerous worlds that they have never imagined before. In “Lord of the Flies”, a plane crashes into an island with a group of boys that become isolated. Young, ordinary schoolboys must fend for themselves on a desert with no external authority. They must adapt to their surroundings and create their own civilization —later on, their own savagery takes it down.…