The Spectacle of Counting: Illuminating Exploitation in The Hunger Games
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.