Bread, Games, & Hoplessness: Talking to Our Kids about The Hunger Games

Young people are flocking to theaters to see The Hunger Games: Catching Fire. So we probably should be prepared to talk to our kids.
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Updated Dec 09, 2013
Bread, Games, & Hoplessness: Talking to Our Kids about The Hunger Games

 

Over the Thanksgiving weekend, the second film in the Hunger Games series, Catching Fire, set box office records, shattering the record previously held by the first Harry Potter movie.

Like the Harry Potter films, Catching Fire and its predecessor, The Hunger Games, is based on a best-selling series of novels aimed at a younger market. But that’s where the similarity ends. There’s no Quidditch, wands, or spells. And while people die in J.K. Rowling’s novels, Suzanne Collins’s books are steeped in death, suffering, and sorrow.

Okay, there’s one other similarity: You can’t avoid either the book or the film series. So it’s probably a good idea to engage with our kids on the subject.

Collins’ trilogy—The Hunger Games, Catching Fire, and Mockingjay—is a dystopian tale set in a totalitarian successor state to the United States known as “Panem,” from the Latin word for “bread.”

The name is ironic and telling. Ironic, because while the inhabitants of the Capitol live in decadent splendor, those inhabiting the outlying districts barely scrape by.

The name is telling because the defining ritual of Panem is the Hunger Games in which two young people from each district fight each other to the death while the entire nation watches. Hence, panem et circenses, bread and circuses.

Collins’ heroine is a sixteen-year-old named Katniss Everdeen from District 12. She’s a reluctant heroine who only volunteers for the Games to spare her younger sister. After her victory at the games, she becomes a symbol of resistance.

That resistance is the Catching Fire of the title, a fire that the regime desperately seeks to extinguish, starting with Katniss.

As Alissa Wilkinson of The King’s College wrote in Christianity Today, Collins’ novels are a critique of “our entertainment-sodden culture.” The games are the ultimate “reality TV” show: People are literally eliminated by the competition.

In the arena, “things like bravery and skill with a bow might matter,” but entertaining the viewers can literally make the difference between life and death. When Katniss asks her mentor how one wins the games, he replies “you get people to like you.”

Not by being brave, bold, or pure of heart but by putting on a good show. Sound familiar?

That’s not to say that individual characters aren’t virtuous; Katniss and her co-winner Peeta certainly are. But Panem’s ideology—as in “a set of conscious and unconscious ideas that constitute one's goals, expectations, and actions”—is about power and appearance.

There’s another aspect of Collins’ world that stands out: it’s a religion-free zone. The word “god” never appears in the novels, not even as an exclamation.

Thus, like many dystopian stories, hope is in short supply. When one evil is vanquished, we cannot be confident that what takes its place will be any better.

That’s particularly true for Katniss, who has paid a terrible price to help secure an, at best, ambiguous future. Many fans hated what Katniss had become by the trilogy’s end: broken and somber. But without hope or the basis for hope, it’s a realistic conclusion.

It’s this realism, even more than the violence of the story, that you need to talk about with your kids.

To help you do that, we’ve got some discussion questions--conversation starters, really--for you and your kids about the Hunger Games. Simply come to BreakPoint.org and click on this commentary to view them.

BreakPoint is a Christian worldview ministry that seeks to build and resource a movement of Christians committed to living and defending Christian worldview in all areas of life. Begun by Chuck Colson in 1991 as a daily radio broadcast, BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today’s news and trends via radio, interactive media, and print. Today BreakPoint commentaries, co-hosted by Eric Metaxas and John Stonestreet, air daily on more than 1,200 outlets with an estimated weekly listening audience of eight million people. Feel free to contact us at BreakPoint.org where you can read and search answers to common questions.

Eric Metaxas is a co-host of BreakPoint Radio and a best-selling author whose biographies, children's books, and popular apologetics have been translated into more than a dozen languages.

Publication date: December 9, 2013

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