Similarities Between The Hunger Games And Fahrenheit 451

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Both The Hunger Games and Fahrenheit 451 are examples of stories using dystopia. In both, many characteristics of dystopian societies are used. These common characteristics include the fact that citizens live in a dehumanized state, the society is an illusion of a perfect utopian world, and the citizens are perceived to be under constant surveillance. The first dystopian characteristic that The Hunger Games and Fahrenheit 451 have in common is that the citizens live in a dehumanized state. This is evident in The Hunger Games when they send the children into the games. It is inhumane to send 24 children into a harsh environment where you know that 23 of them will die or be killed. The even worse part of this is that the people in the Capital do not see this as a punishment. They see this as a game where they bet on who will win and cheer when a child is killed. This type of dehumanized state is also evident in Fahrenheit 451. The governing body in the book is trying to take away what makes everyone different. They are taking away what makes …show more content…

Fahrenheit 451 has a government that has been working to a perfect society and for the most part they have people that believe their boring lives are perfect. They convince people that they don’t need free thinking and that whatever the parlor wall tells them is the perfect society they live in. In reality, they are taking away the differences in people that make them who they are and they are willing to kill some people in the process. This society is far from perfect. The Capital may be a perfect society in its eyes, but in The Hunger Games they have a society that is far from perfect. They try to convince the districts that they live in a perfect world and that they are fortunate to have things the way that they are. However, the districts are quite poor and in the Capital they live a lavish lifestyle that spoils