Trickery And Deception In Hunger Games, By Suzanne Collins

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Trickery and Deception are powerful to manipulate others
In today’s society several powerful influences use trickery and deception to manipulate others, benefit from their losses and to attain the upper hand in a scenario. There is, undoubtedly, a clear correlation between trickery and deception however there is a slight difference that sets them apart. Deception is a set of actions fabricated to delude someone into believing a lie while trickery is the art of disguising oneself. In the novel, Hunger Games, by Suzanne Collins trickery and deception play an integral role through the influences of media, the perception of others and through the power of the capital. Suzan Collins exposes the deceptive nature of media throughout the novel, The …show more content…

The author Suzanne Collins demonstrates this when she portrays the Career tributes as “districts, in which winning the reaping is such a great honor, people [Career tributes] are eager to risk their lives” (Collins 22). The people of the Career districts trained their whole for the chance and opportunity to take part in the Hunger Games based on the false reality of what they see on the television. The false reality that the television provides conceals the viewers from learning the true reality/ harshness of the Hunger Games and influences people such as the Career tributes to actually pursue their goal of taking part in this dangerous battle. The deception of the television in the novel, Hunger Games, influences and manipulates the way some people wish to lead their lives. Suzanne Collins …show more content…

The Capitol’s appearance deceives the tributes and the surrounding districts. As the train leaves the tunnel from the mountains and is flooded with sunlight Katniss and Peeta rush to the window to see what they would normally see on television with their own eyes.). This demonstrates an act of trickery by the Capital. Katniss further describes the, “glistening buildings…the shiny cars” (59) as having, “colors [that] seem artificial, the pinks to deep, the greens too bright, the yellow painful to the eyes” (59). Through this description that Katniss provides it showcases that the Capitol hides its true colors through this fake appearance of a happy, colorful place. During the interviews, Peeta indicates that he has had the biggest crush on Katniss Everdeen for the longest time but Katniss takes this the wrong way and Haymitch corrects her by saying, “"Who cares? It's all a big show. It's all how you're perceived" (135) Haymitch’s viewpoint demonstrates how characters must deceive the truth to strategically improve one’s chances to win the games. Katniss and Peeta use this budding romance to gain more sponsorships throughout the entire games. Also, at the end of the novel Haymitch warns Katniss that she must convince the Capitol that her act with the berries was not treason “your only defense can be you were so madly in love you weren't

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