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Archetypes In The Hunger Games

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Imagine your world is divided by the color of your blood. Red and Silver. Imagine your best friend is taken away to an arena of death because their name was pulled from a bowl of others names that just narrowly escaped death. Wouldn’t you want change? In King’s Cage by Victoria Aveyard, the world is divided by blood type. In The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, Panem is a destroyed country divided into districts that send a male and female tribute to death every year. Both books present two female outcasts that are fed up with their worlds, and attempt to save themselves and the people they love. Aveyard and Collins both use character archetype and mood to present the theme of that when you are being controlled by someone you want to get out you want to get away. Even though it might be hard, as long as you hold what and who you love most you will always find a way back to them.

In the dystopian novel, The Hunger Games, Suzanne Collins in the beginning creates a depressed mood.For example, at the beginning of the story when the author reveals how the hard years of the life in District 12 have affected the people.Katniss wakes up the day of the reaping she thinks of all the people of District 12 gathered together waiting to see if they or their child will be sent to their deathbed. The character thinks, “Men and women with hunched shoulders, swollen knuckles, many who have long stopped trying to scrub the coal dust out of their broken nails, the lines of their sunken
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