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  • © 2014

The Politics of Panem

Challenging Genres

Editors:

  • Written by experts, Gives a modern approach, Comprehensive in Scope

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Table of contents (14 chapters)

  1. Front Matter

    Pages i-x
    1. Introduction

      • Sean P. Connors
      Pages 1-12
  2. “It’s All How You’re Perceived”

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 13-13
    2. “Some Walks you have to Take Alone”

      • Roberta Seelinger Trites
      Pages 15-28
    3. Worse Games to Play?

      • Susan S. M. Tan
      Pages 29-43
    4. Hungering for Middle Ground

      • Meghann Meeusen
      Pages 45-61
  3. “I Have a Kind of Power I Never Knew I Possessed”

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 63-63
    2. The Three Faces of Evil

      • Brian Mcdonald
      Pages 65-84
    3. “I Was Watching You, Mockingjay”

      • Sean P. Connors
      Pages 85-102
    4. Exploiting the Gaps in the Fence

      • Michael Macaluso, Cori Mckenzie
      Pages 103-121
  4. “Look at the State they Left us in”

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 123-123
    2. “We End our Hunger for Justice!”

      • Rodrigo Joseph RodrĂ­guez
      Pages 157-165
  5. “That’s a Wrap”

    1. Front Matter

      Pages 167-167
    2. Are the -ISMS Ever in your Favor?

      • Iris Shepard, Ian Wojcik-Andrews
      Pages 189-202
    3. The Revolution Starts with Rue

      • Antero Garcia, Marcelle Haddix
      Pages 203-217
  6. Back Matter

    Pages 223-225

About this book

The Hunger Games trilogy is a popular culture success. Embraced by adults as well as adolescents, Suzanne Collins’s bestselling books have inspired an equally popular film franchise. But what, if anything, can reading the Hunger Games tell us about what it means to be human in the world today? What complex social and political issues does the trilogy invite readers to explore? Does it merely entertain, or does it also instruct?

Bringing together scholars in literacy education and the humanities, The Politics of Panem: Challenging Genres examines how the Hunger Games books and films, when approached from the standpoint of theory, can challenge readers and viewers intellectually. At the same time, by subjecting Collins’s trilogy to literary criticism, this collection of essays challenges its complexity as an example of dystopian literature for adolescents. How can applying philosophic frameworks such as those attributable to Socrates and Foucault to the Hunger Games trilogy deepen our appreciation for the issues it raises? What, if anything, can we learn from considering fan responses to the Hunger Games? How might adapting the trilogy for film complicate its ability to engage in sharp-edged social criticism? By exploring these and other questions, The Politics of Panem: Challenging Genres invites teachers, students, and fans of the Hunger Games to consider how Collins’s trilogy, as a representative of young adult dystopian fiction, functions as a complex narrative. In doing so, it highlights questions and issues that lend themselves to critical exploration in secondary and college classrooms.

Editors and Affiliations

  • University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, USA

    Sean P. Connors

Bibliographic Information

Buy it now

Buying options

eBook USD 49.99
Price excludes VAT (USA)
  • Available as PDF
  • Read on any device
  • Instant download
  • Own it forever

Tax calculation will be finalised at checkout

Other ways to access