“We have educated ourselves into a world from which wonder, and the fear and dread and splendor and freedom of wonder, have been banished." — Robertson Davies
Friday, January 25, 2013
The Hunger Games and the dystopian nature-disconnect
We've spent a lot of time in my literacy class talking about The Hunger Games and how teachers can harness its popularity to make literacy connections across the curriculum. Here are few general thoughts on The Hunger Games to add to the multitude of voices out there.
The Hunger Games as social commentary
The Hunger Games suggests a variety of social issues without going into great depth on any of them. At its heart, it is an action-packed hero’s quest told through the eyes of a strong-but-flawed heroine fighting to survive in a dystopian future. As New Yorker critic David Denby put it, “the reason for its success is simple: it makes teens feel both victimized and important”.
Nevertheless, The Hunger Games is a great starting point for exploring a variety of current environmental and social justice issues. Panem is post-climate change North America, so The Hunger Games’ popularity may partly be due to young peoples’ very real concerns about climate change. And there are parallels with the Occupy movement: Panem’s “99%” live in a state of ongoing environmental strife, food insecurity and resource depletion while the remaining few live in the Capitol, where the nation’s wealth and power are concentrated. Though there may not be a cause-and-effect relationship between The Hunger Games and the Occupy movement, there is certainly an element of art-imitating-life-imitating-art that is worth exploring with students.
The Capitol itself is a leisure dystopia. Living in idle wealth, its residents are obsessed with style and engaged in a never-ending game of physical one-up-manship, going so far as to disfigure themselves to attract notice. Oblivious to the food shortages in the rest of the country, residents eat rich foods and engage in planned bingeing and purging. All this behaviour is only slightly more extreme than our current celebrity culture and standards of beauty, and is a clear metaphor for the world food supply and Western overconsumption (and Hollywood is too close to the Capitol’s geographic location to be a coincidence).
It would be interesting to investigate with students the trend for dystopian settings in young adult fiction over the last few years. Dystopian fiction has typically become more popular in times of social crisis. For example, the triumvirate of twentieth century dystopian fiction (A Brave New World, Farenheit 451 and 1984) was written during the World War II/Cold War years.
The dystopian nature-disconnect
Most fictional dystopias are set in highly urban environments or ravaged wastelands, and even those that are set in relatively healthy landscapes isolate their characters from contact with the natural world, as in Bradbury’s Farenheit 451, where the countryside is the domain of the exiles. The Hunger Games is no different: the land has been wasted, resources have been depleted, citizens are prohibited from wandering freely in the forest and gates surround the districts to separate humans from their natural environment. Wild landscapes and the animals that inhabit them are perceived as dangerous.
Why is this such a common element in dystopian fiction? I think it’s because the primal connection humans have with the land is fundamentally incompatible with dystopian power structures. Beyond providing sustenance, nature has a healing and revitalizing power and is intrinsically linked to human freedom and happiness. Seen through the lens of the Western dualistic nature/culture paradigm, a dystopian superpower cannot not effectively control its subjects if the people have healthy relationships with the land, which is by definition wild and uncontrollable. Excluding nature’s light and beauty excludes hope, which enables control. Separating people from the place in which they live is necessary in dystopian worlds, because a return to nature would lead to rebellion and independence. The staging of the final battle in Star Wars: Return of the Jedi (in which the Rebel Alliance finally succeeds in overthrowing the Galactic Empire) on the lush forest moon of Endor can be seen as an example of this. In The Hunger Games, this is played out through the heroine, Katniss Everdeen.
Katniss has a deep connection to the land, which has been fundamental to her survival throughout her life. As a young girl, the sight of a single dandelion changed Katniss’ life, inspiring her to hunt and forage to keep her family from starving and to provide healing medicines. Because these acts are illegal all resources belong to the state, and wandering in the woods is forbidden Katniss’ relationship with the land defines her as a rebel before the story even begins. Beyond the resources the woods provide, Katniss also finds existential freedom and relief there. This bond with the natural world and the vitality it gives her is in stark contrast to the dreary hopelessness of the other residents of her community, who remain caged within the district fences, and to the shallow, overconsumptive urbanity of the Capitol residents, who do not realize they are imprisoned by their luxury.
Once she enters the Hunger Games arena, it is Katniss’ skill as a forager, hunter and herbalist that enable her to survive. But beyond these superficial skills, I think it’s Katniss’ lifelong immersion in nature that gives her the self-assurance and freedom of mind needed to defy the Capitol and ultimately spark a rebellion against its repressive regime. It would be interesting to do a comparative study of other dystopian novels to explore the links across the genre between nature, rebellion and freedom.
Related to Katniss’ connection with the land, The Hunger Games offers another type of literacy beyond the millions of books its fans have read. As an expert expert hunter and forager, Katniss knows how to read signs in nature as efficiently as readers of books can decode symbols on a page. It is this reading of the land that gives her access to the physical world and enables her survival, and gives educators an opportunity to forge a curricular connection with environmental stewardship and traditional Native ways of knowing. Done with care, the popularity of The Hunger Games could be harnessed as a tool to develop interest in and validation of indigenous culture amongst both Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal youth.
Stay tuned for a lesson plan incorporating The Hunger Games into the phys ed curriculum!
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment