Why {The} Hunger Games is Flawed to Its Core
N.D. Wilson
N.D. Wilson
Here is the link.
{And, I would like to say, I don't hate you if you like THG. I am simply expressing my opinion.}
{This review/analogy is by a guy named N.D. Wilson. I was given this link by Jessie and I liked it so much that I just had to post it.}
{I suggest that if you like THG, you don't read this.}
{It could make you mad.}
{I will add my own personal comments in these parentheses.}
Almost everywhere I go, I’m asked about The Hunger Games (book, not film){but the film counts too, 'cause it's based on the book}. The questions used to fly about Twilight and Potter,
but Katniss and dystopic death-matches have taken over.
First, I completely understand why The Hunger Games took
off. Suzanne Collins knows how to suck readers into a page-turning
frenzy. The pace of the book grabs like gorilla glue and the
kill-or-be-killed tension keeps fingernails nibbled short. She knows her
craft, and I have to say that I’m grateful to her for expanding our
mutual marketplace (in the same way that Rowling did). That said,
Collins stumbles badly in her understanding of some pretty fundamental
elements of human story, and the whole thing is flawed to its core as a
result.
The best authors are students of humanity, both as individuals and grouped in societies (big and small).
- C.S. Lewis’ profound insight into human motivation and relationships is on display in Narnia, and even more intricately in his Space Trilogy. He paints honest and accurate portraits, leading readers through darkness toward wisdom.
- Think about Mark Twain’s ability to see and image the motivations of boys, and the entire society in which those boys lived.
- Tom Wolfe’s sharp clear vision is on display in both his essays and his fiction. He sees into the hearts and minds of men; he sees which of their choices and follies will set fire to the world around them, and how exactly that fire will progress and grow. (And, like the greatest writers, he manages to maintain an affection and sympathy for his characters and for humanity in general despite this insight.)
When an author profoundly misunderstands human societies, arbitrarily forcing a group or a character into decisions and actions that they would never choose for themselves given the preceding narrative, it drives me bonkers. I once threw The Fountainhead across the room for exactly that crime, and I’ve never read anything by Rand since. And Collins bundles clumsy offenses like this in Costco bulk…
Quick Switch 1
Katniss volunteers to take her sister’s place in the Hunger Games. Yay. Self-sacrifice. Christian themes, yadda, yadda. So far so good. But that walnut shell slides away immediately and a moment of self-sacrifice is replaced with sustained, radical, murderous self-interest.
{Extreme agreement by Willow}
In the Christian ethos, laying down one’s life for another is
glorious. In the Darwinian world, self-preservation is the ultimate
shiny good. Readers bite the lure of sacrifice, and then blissfully go
along with survive-at-the-expense-of- murdered-innocents. Katniss
becomes evil–she’s even relieved at one point that someone else murdered
her innocent little friend, because she knew that she would have to do
it herself eventually. And we still give her credit for being
sacrificial…{Poor Rue...}
(Sacrificial Sidenote: Many people point to Peeta as the truly noble and sacrificial character. I don’t mind him as a character, but a picture of heroic sacrifice he ain’t. In Hunger Games, he’s fundamentally passive and submissive. He’s that guy who is happy to ‘just be friends’ with the cute girl. Or a lot more than friends (but only if she initiates). He’s just the puppy at her heels. “Sure, kill me Katniss. Oh, you’d rather we both killed ourselves? Yes, Katniss. Whatever you say, Katniss.{What a man there, Peeta}” Really? There are plenty of guys in the world just like Peeta, and kudos to Collins for using the type, especially since nice second-fiddle fellas like that confuse and conflict girls tremendously. But worldview readers are gaming themselves into seeing something that just isn’t there.)
Quick Switch 2
The self-defense defense. Katniss is a victim, but so is every other innocent person thrust into these games. She should be rising above the game and defending herself (and everyone else) from the Hunger Games. Instead, she kills her fellow victims. Sure, if someone is in the act of trying to murder you, shoot them through the throat. But dropping tracker jackers on sleeping kids? Negativo. Why is she playing this game by the rules at all? The Hunger Games are the real enemy.{Yeah!}
If Collins wanted her protagonist to be the kind of rebel who would start a revolution (and she does want that), she should have had Katniss cutting her locator out of her arm on night one instead of participating in and perpetuating the evil. But readers are a little numb to killing, and this particular switch wasn’t hard to pull on us.
{WARNING: Kind of gross subject} Here’s a thought experiment to help us see clearly. What if Collins
had thrown her character into this arena and the rules had been
different? Last one raped wins. Rape or be raped. Obviously, a real hero
wouldn’t play the game. Explode the game. (Sidenote: rape is awful, but
at least the other kids would have survived.){End gross subject}
Faux-revolution
File this under misunderstanding humanity, which is just another way of saying that The Hunger Games misunderstands courage, inspiration, oppression, and nobility as they relate to people in a collective herd. If you want to see an accurate picture of how one enslaved victim can threaten a regime, watch Gladiator. Twenty thousand people (and the emperor) are commanding one slave to kill another. (Kill!Kill!Kill!) But instead, he throws his sword in the dirt and turns his back on the emperor. And…the people he just defied now adore him. He inspires. His courage is unlike anything they’ve seen, and he is now officially a political problem.{I have not heard of this movie, and I do not recommend it.[Update. I have been told that Gladiator is not a good movie at all]}
Walk through what Collins has Katniss do while playing in the Hunger Games. First, she does and says exactly what she’s told to do and say (trying to manipulate the mob with false sentimentality){Hmmm....}. Second, she plays the vile despotic game, and by the immoral rules{My point exactly}. Finally, she threatens to kill herself (and talks her faux-boyfriend into doing it with her). This, allegedly, panics the establishment and is the spark that will start a revolution.
But the world doesn’t work that way. Men and women are not inspired to risk their lives in insurrection and defiance by someone reaching for poisonous berries. Revolutions are not started by teen girls suicide-pacting with cute baker boys. Oppressive regimes are not threatened by people who do what they are told.{*agrees*}
Put yourself in the author’s well-worn desk chair. If you really
wanted your Katniss to threaten this tyrannical system like many great
men and women have threatened many tyrants throughout the ages{or in books}, what
would you have her do? She needs to be a lot more punk rock (in the best
possible way). She needs to stop giving a rip about her own survival
(the most dangerous men and women always forget themselves){Like in LOTR}. She needs
to refuse to be a piece in the game{See! See!}. Imagine millions of people watching
her disarm some boy who was trying to murder her, and then cutting out
his locator, hiding him, and keeping him alive{Yes yes yes!}. Every time she defied
the order to kill, she would earn the true loyalty of the spared kid’s
district. And she would start being a legitimate political threat. (Even
Tom Wolfe asked me about The Hunger Games,
having apparently heard it had some revolutionary insight. I hit him
with the primary plot beats and watched him blink in confusion.)
There is more to say, but I’ve said enough. Well, almost. One final
thought: never read or watch a story like a passive recipient, enjoying
something in a visceral way and then retroactively trying to project
deeper value or meaning onto the story you’ve already ingested. Such
projections have been making authors and directors seem more intelligent
than they are for decades. As you watch, as you read, shoulder your way
into the creator’s chair. Don’t take the final product for granted,
analyze the creator’s choices and cheerfully push them in new and
different directions. As we do this, the clarity of our criticism will
grow immensely. Which is to say, we’ll be suckered far less often than
we currently are.
Lastly, Suzanne Collins can really write. It’s just that we can’t really read.
{Ok, imagine this. Katniss has been stuck into THG. After she cuts out her locator, she gets attacked by, hmm lets just say Glimmer. Glimmer is trying to, ok stab her with... something. She hits him{or her}over the head with her bow, knocks her/him out, then drags him/her into the woods to her hiding place. She repeats this with the help of Peeta & Rue. The government doesn't know what to do. They try to kill Katniss but can't. That I think would work}
{Ok, imagine this. Katniss has been stuck into THG. After she cuts out her locator, she gets attacked by, hmm lets just say Glimmer. Glimmer is trying to, ok stab her with... something. She hits him{or her}over the head with her bow, knocks her/him out, then drags him/her into the woods to her hiding place. She repeats this with the help of Peeta & Rue. The government doesn't know what to do. They try to kill Katniss but can't. That I think would work}
~Willow~
Woo hoo! Yay! Huzzah! *Applauds at Willow's awesomeness*
ReplyDeleteThank you Jessie:)
ReplyDelete~Willow~
I understand you are trying to get your opinion across, but this is all you're posting about. I don't mean to be rude, but I love your blog, and I haven't had any non-Hunger Games opinion posts to read for quite a while. :(
ReplyDelete~Carolyn
{{Again, sorry if this offended you.}}
Carolyn: I know, sorry, but I liked this article so much, that I just had to post it. Don't worry, unless someone gives me a huge argument, I won't. I will get back to normal posts super soon, k?
ReplyDelete~Willow~
Gladiator=very violent. I watched the non-violent parts when I was young. Once, I took a peek when my parents said to close my eyes. Immediately, a man was sawed in half by a passing chariot. Too graphic for 7-year-old eyes. :)
ReplyDeleteThis is a good article. :) I plan to write a review when I read the Hunger Games.
Thank you Willow!!!
ReplyDeleteThanks Willow. :]
ReplyDelete~Carolyn
Spicemuffin: Thank you{about Gladiator}! I will add that to the post!
ReplyDeleteCaro & Emma: You're welcome!
~Willow~
Thank you so much, Willow, that needed to be said. :)
ReplyDelete-Hope