“hunger plays a crucial role in the lives of the Capitol citizens: they organize their lives around satisfying their complex desires just as surely as Katniss and Gale Hawthorne have organized their lives around satisfying their more basic hungers and keeping their families from starvation.” HungerKatniss EverdeenHunger GamesHunger Games PhilosophyGale HawthorneThe Capitol Author:Christina Van Dyke
“In sharp contrast with Katniss, who’s constantly thinking about how her actions will impact others - her family and her community - and who’s determined to protect her sister and her mother, the prep team’s docile self-focus means that the stylists experience even the televised horrors of the Hunger Games in personal terms: '"I was still in bed!" "I had just had my eyebrows dyed!" "I swear I nearly fainted!" Everything is about them, not the dying boys and girls in the arena'.” SelfishnessKatniss EverdeenHunger GamesHunger Games PhilosophySelf FocusedThe Capitol Author:Christina Van Dyke
“Foucault’s description of an eighteenth-century soldier is also an accurate portrait of the typical citizen of District 13. The District 13 citizen is 'something that can be made; out of a formless clay, an inapt body, the machine required can be constructed; posture is gradually corrected; a calculated constraint runs slowly through each part of the body, mastering it, making it pliable, ready at all times, turning silently into the automatism of habit.' If you enact this process on the scale of a whole society, you get a populace that literally embodies obedience.” PhilosophyBodiesHunger GamesFoucaultHunger Games PhilosophyDistrict 13 Author:Christina Van Dyke
“All of this self-centered preoccupation with their bodies actually reinforces the power of the Capitol over its citizens - and the rest of Panem.” BodiesHunger GamesHunger Games PhilosophySelf CentredThe CapitolPanem Author:Christina Van Dyke
“In the Capitol, the citizens unthinkingly participate in the political system largely because they’re distracted; their attention is diverted from politics onto self-centered desires. In District 13, the citizens unthinkingly participate in the political system because of deeply ingrained habits formed through their continual obedience to the myriad rules and regulations imposed by President Coin. The effects of this constant compliance are gradual, cumulative, and dramatic.” DesiresBodiesHunger GamesHunger Games PhilosophySelf CentredPresident Coin Author:Christina Van Dyke