Dystopian Perspectives In Suzanne Collin’s Hunger Games Triology

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A. Arockia Johnson
Dr. M. Anisa Barvin

Abstract

Future is an impression of the legacies of the past as well as the present. The Hunger Games Trilogy serves as a reflection of past and present events alike by all accounts of the modern age tragic book. By analyzing this trilogy as per the perspective of domain, expansionism, post dominion, and globalization we run over many equivalents. Tragic works will as a general rule equivalent political patterns. Mistreated universes are not actually gauges of entire world annihilating destinies, yet various means by which social orders can show themselves the road to decimation. The Hunger Games Trilogy depicts events unfolding within the sorrowful nation of Panem, as organized within the narrative, in reality, North America AND is the resilient and vital landmass enduring beyond the final days, a direct consequence of a catastrophic event "fierce battle for what little food remained" (The Hunger Games 21). Katniss the legend makes reference to Panem is surrounded by water with much of the land below sea level.

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How to Cite
A. Arockia Johnson, & Dr. M. Anisa Barvin. (2024). Dystopian Perspectives In Suzanne Collin’s Hunger Games Triology. Educational Administration: Theory and Practice, 30(4), 7725–7727. https://doi.org/10.53555/kuey.v30i4.2632
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Articles
Author Biographies

A. Arockia Johnson

Ph. D. Research Scholar, Dr. Zakir Husain College, Ilayangudi

Dr. M. Anisa Barvin

Assistant professor, Research Department of English, Dr. Zakir Husain College, Ilayangudi