View Item 
        •   Utrecht University Student Theses Repository Home
        • UU Theses Repository
        • Theses
        • View Item
        •   Utrecht University Student Theses Repository Home
        • UU Theses Repository
        • Theses
        • View Item
        JavaScript is disabled for your browser. Some features of this site may not work without it.

        Browse

        All of UU Student Theses RepositoryBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjectsThis CollectionBy Issue DateAuthorsTitlesSubjects

        The Spectacle of Counting: Illuminating Exploitation in The Hunger Games

        Thumbnail
        View/Open
        Thesis 6477879 Mulcahy, Leah.pdf (341.1Kb)
        Publication date
        2025
        Author
        Mulcahy, Leah
        Metadata
        Show full item record
        Summary
        This paper investigates various representations of civic exploitation in The Hunger Games trilogy and its film adaptations. Firstly, I hypothesise how and why quantitative language (i.e. language that expresses acts of quantification) may capture the attention of contemporary audiences. I engage with sections of Guy Debord’s Society of the Spectacle to characterise the spectacle as it appears Panem’s violent, fictional world. In order to better delineate the term ‘violent’, I turn to Rob Nixon’s definition of ‘slow violence’ to differentiate between acts of immediate, explicit violence and unseen, systemic processes of exploitation. Through close readings of the texts, I posit that the diegetic world of Panem uses various attention-grabbing spectacles (numbers, the Games, televisual techniques) to conceal mechanisms of exploitation, and that the novels and films use these same attention-grabbing spectacles to reveal mechanisms of exploitation in a meta way. The question that emerges is whether the series’ employment of Capitol practices leads the extradiegetic audience to identify and problematize these mechanisms or become immersed in them.
        URI
        https://studenttheses.uu.nl/handle/20.500.12932/49045
        Collections
        • Theses
        Utrecht university logo