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'Hunger Games' Exposes Myth of Technological Progress

Posted: 03/24/2012 9:32 am Updated: 03/24/2012 9:32 am

By: Jeremy Hsu, InnovationNewsDaily Senior Writer
Published: 03/23/2012 02:28 PM EDT on InnovationNewsDaily

Tomorrow's world of "The Hunger Games" doesn't just showcase the reality TV spectacle of teenagers battling to the death — it also features futuristic hovercraft, force fields and bioengineered "Mutt" creatures. Those technological marvels represent tools of oppression for the dystopian nation of Panem, where the Capitol elite live in high-tech luxury supported by the old-fashioned sweat of district coal miners, farm hands and factory workers.

But the popularity of the "Hunger Games" series has not stopped some fans from eying the technological imbalances of the story. Some question why a post-apocalyptic North America filled with futuristic technologies would still rely upon coal for its electricity needs; others wonder about the story's complete absence of the Internet. One character in "The Hunger Games" books complains about "forgotten" military technologies such as high-flying planes, military satellites and robotic drones, even as he rides inside a hovercraft.

Such "gaps" in technology don't necessarily represent plot holes, according to historians of science and technology. Real societies have adopted or rejected technologies based on whether they suited their particular economic, political or cultural circumstances.

"Technology is not pre-determined as "better" — it becomes better when a society deems it to be better or more advanced," said Joline Zepcevski, a researcher with a Ph.D. in the history of science and technology at the University of Minnesota. "With respect to "The Hunger Games," there is no reason why a new society, rising from the ashes of an old society, would necessarily re-invent the same technologies."

Technology has come and gone throughout history, said Marie Hicks, an assistant professor of history of technology at the Illinois Institute of Technology Chicago. Electric cars appeared on U.S. roads at the start of the 20th century, but disappeared for almost a century before making their recent comeback. Supersonic civilian jetliners made their debut with the Concorde in 1976, but ended up grounded in 2003.

Even high-speed trains that took off in Japan, China and Europe have mostly failed to catch on in the U.S. (the Capitol rulers of "The Hunger Games" still have a high-speed rail system).

Technologies of terror

So why does Panem in "The Hunger Games" feature some technologies and not others? The Capitol rulers may be focused on technologies useful for social control, said Eden Medina, assistant professor of informatics at Indiana University. For instance, the bioengineered "Mutt" creatures become weapons of psychological terror in the Hunger Games — an annual event that forces each of Panem's 12 districts to provide a boy and girl tribute for a televised gladiatorial battle.

The Capitol also puts televisions in every home and big screens in public squares to broadcast the hateful Hunger Games and other state propaganda to the masses. That act echoes both George Orwell's dystopian "1984" story and real totalitarian societies such as North Korea (although North Korea relies more on radio).

By contrast, the Capitol rulers strictly limit phone communication between districts and don't have anything resembling the Internet. Their choice to avoid the Internet seems like a no-brainer, because its ability to give voice to the masses makes it much more difficult to control than television.

"It's hard to say because it's a fictional world and we'd have to ask Suzanne Collins (author of "The Hunger Games"), but it's not outside the realm of possibility that this society would make those decisions," Medina told InnovationNewsDaily. "I'd imagine it might be harder to keep news of a district uprising secret if there's many-to-many Internet communication."

Some are more equal than others

The technological imbalances within "The Hunger Games" also highlight the story's emphasis on social and political inequalities. The repressive Capitol enjoys instantly prepared food, smart household gadgets and obsessing over the latest Capitol couture, Medina points out. By contrast, the "District 12" home of heroine Katniss Everdeen located in today's Appalachia has a poor, starving population that works in the coal mines and suffers from electricity shortages.

"Uneven technological development is a staple of science fiction because it implies a society, and a government, that has lost its way or has mistaken priorities," Hicks said, "And as a result unjustly divides technological resources, or uses those resources to control the populace in inappropriate ways."

By drawing a contrast between the futuristic Capitol's wonders and the dangerous, dirty work of coal mining, "The Hunger Games" may be prompting readers to sense that "some underlying element of this society is in disorder," said Bernard Carlson, a professor of science, technology and society at the University of Virginia.

"If you're [the Capitol] producing energy to make the houses of elite comfortable, and they don't pay the environmental or safety price for it, you might as well use coal as opposed to something else," Carlson said.

In the end, "The Hunger Games" does not celebrate the progress of technology — an idea that historians of science and technology see as overly simplistic anyway. Instead, the books show how a society's technological choices reflect its political motivations and social priorities.

Still, even the historians who have picked up "The Hunger Games" don't judge the story too seriously based on its technological choices. They, too, want to be entertained.

"I was in it for a good read," Medina said.

You can follow InnovationNewsDaily Senior Writer Jeremy Hsu on Twitter @ScienceHsu. Follow InnovationNewsDaily on Twitter @News_Innovation, or on Facebook.

Copyright 2012 InnovationNewsDaily, a TechMediaNetwork company. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

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By: Jeremy Hsu, InnovationNewsDaily Senior Writer Published: 03/23/2012 02:28 PM EDT on InnovationNewsDaily Tomorrow's world of "The Hunger Games" doesn't just showcase the reality TV ...
By: Jeremy Hsu, InnovationNewsDaily Senior Writer Published: 03/23/2012 02:28 PM EDT on InnovationNewsDaily Tomorrow's world of "The Hunger Games" doesn't just showcase the reality TV ...
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09:28 AM on 03/29/2012
"Some question why a post-apocalyptic North America filled with futuristic technologies would still rely upon coal for its electricity needs."

And just what planet are those "some" from?! We, in the 21st century, have just given coal burning power plants, built in the early part of the 20th century, greater leeway in polluting!
12:58 PM on 03/28/2012
Soooo uh . . are we ever getting the badge program back HP? (crickets)
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10:30 PM on 03/26/2012
. . . I sense a disturbing trend towards a confusion of fiction and reality here. . . is the internet responsible for this too?
11:28 PM on 03/28/2012
[TYPE YOUR COMMENT HERE]
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04:24 PM on 03/26/2012
one word - FICTION!!
12:56 PM on 03/28/2012
We'll see. Actually, I won't . . but some will. Don't be one of the ones that will.
04:14 PM on 03/26/2012
Although there may have been technology present in Panem that made coal necessary, I think the industry also existed as a tool for oppression. If men are working in coal mines they are not able to rebel nor are they able to live long due to "accidents'" and health complications.
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HelloDollyLlama
12:00 PM on 03/26/2012
The dictators banned the internet because that is how uprisings start. They ran out of oil and District 13 had what was left of their nuclear power. Did you think this through, before you wrote this article?
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10:25 PM on 03/26/2012
Not all uprisings start with he internet . . humans have had them for thousands of years BEFORE before the internet, and will likely continue having them after the lights go out. . . .again . . . beware the tech bubble!
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10:26 PM on 03/26/2012
rats! sorry about the typos!
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Thomas Reissmann
Yes we can, but...
11:16 AM on 03/26/2012
It does pose one question though, why do we always imagin a dystopian future? We love watching those apocalyptic movies and almost all science fiction movies about the future are dystopian in nature. Sure we need conflict to create suspense, but does it say something about us as a society that we always envision the future to be bleak? When in reality I would say continuous progress actually creates more prosperity, less suffering, less conflict and more freedom and self-determination.
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SpeakupNation
Pray for the dead and fight like hell for the livi
11:37 AM on 03/26/2012
'Star Trek' envisions a much more rosy future. But I fear the other is a more likely outcome, especially since we as a society are clearly unwilling to do much of anything about global climate change.
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Ted Bouklos
U can have ur own opinions but not ur own facts
11:59 AM on 03/26/2012
I always see those movies and stories as the authors warnings of what can happen if we don't fix a certain societal deficiencies.
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WI Patriot
Defending the Constitution.
10:58 AM on 03/26/2012
A good movie which explores what a society run by liberals might look like.
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Thomas Reissmann
Yes we can, but...
11:23 AM on 03/26/2012
Yeah sure, liberals always wanted to deregulate businesses so they can make a profit anyway they see fit and create a society where the working class is suppressed at the benefit of the rich elite. Sounds like a liberal fantasy to me. Do you watch Fox News much?
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SpeakupNation
Pray for the dead and fight like hell for the livi
11:39 AM on 03/26/2012
LOL! The cons see everything through their 'dumb down' glasses! This is clearly more about the 1% assuming even more control over everything.
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qaan
Cake or Death!
01:15 AM on 03/26/2012
There's always someone who wants to p33 on the barbecue.

It's called "suspension of disbelief" and "creative license" for crying out loud.

If you really want to grouse about real-world technicalities, wait until "Salmon Fishing in the Yemen" comes out. I was a fisheries biologist in Oregon and worked on conservation of salmon spawnng grounds. Their ecosystem is extemely fragile, so if there aren't large amounts of trees covering the stream beds (and I do mean streams) no salmon would ever successfully reproduce.

Pardon my massive nerdity. Thanks.
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michelesda
My micro-bio is empty.
04:31 AM on 03/26/2012
I couldn't help wondering if the story might be eponymologically unsound. How does a person end up with a name like "Katniss Everdeen?"
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NorthSide
03:10 PM on 03/26/2012
Is any of Panem's technological disorder any sillier than "Avatar's" planet made of Upsy-Daiseyum?
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qaan
Cake or Death!
11:54 PM on 03/26/2012
Seriously. People seem to forget what the second word in the phrase "science fiction" means. That being said, I didn't see the movie but I did order the hardback trilogy.
12:35 AM on 03/26/2012
I think some of the things make sense. Remember, North America was basically destroyed in war. So would have been any "green" power sources. Coal would be the easiest and fastest to implement. And if it is working, why invest in something else? Since District 12 basically mines it for little in the way of money, there is no financial incentive to go away from it. And I doubt the Capital cares much about pollution, especially if the plants are away from the capital.

As far as the internet, with the way the Capital keeps all the districts in the dark and like to control the propaganda, why would they allow the internet? Again, the nation was destroyed, so there is probably little or no wireless networks. So all internet would need to be wired, and the Capital again has no incentive to do so.
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Barbarian At The Gate
Fortune favors the bold.
12:55 AM on 03/26/2012
Agreed, the internet and wireless networks helped the Arab Spring and the OWS protesters to communicate with each other. The Capitol would keep the 12 Districts without the means for communication.
Darrion Beckles
I wash myself with a rag on a stick
10:12 AM on 03/26/2012
Great points.
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Rich Cash
Enlisted in 1971 - Retired in 1996
11:48 PM on 03/25/2012
Why does the debate over the technologies used or not used in "The Hunger Games" deserve debate? The technologies used in the screenplay are there because they fit the plot line and for no other reason....duhhhh.
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09:26 PM on 03/26/2012
It's not about if the subject deserves a real debate. Not everyone wants to do nothing but engage in heavy political debates non-stop every day. Sometimes it's nice to kick around a topic which is frivolous to cleanse the palate.
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
03:29 PM on 03/25/2012
I keep hearing that there was some sort of natural disaster that led to the dissolution of the US and Canada and their replacement by Panem, so perhaps a lot of the prowess and resources needed to create certain technologies were lost, forcing them to revert back to older technologies which they kept because they work.
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01:47 PM on 03/25/2012
In the opening scenes of the Hunger Games...
I became a little 'vertigoed'
The movie did get better.
I was surprised at Peeta's blond hair..I had seen him with brown hair as I read the book...
I found Gale to be less wirey than I'd envisioned him...
and a bit less quietly reserved...I didn't worry about who she'd choose in the end...
whereas in the book...I did.
I loved the fire on the dress...I had imagined the dress as being long and wispy with oranges and yellows...but the idea of the coal fireplace carriages and the pieces of coal on fire...really made an impression...
In all fairness...after a war in which one brother removes another brother (for Big Brother),one can only imagine that there is nothing left technologically and all of the real minds who would bring it to them, the thinkers and effort-men..have been made to exterminate each other.
I am not sure how much technology one could expect in an area where there is such poverty...
beside not being ABLE to afford technology...the governing body...which could even pull dogs out of dirt..may have chosen to limit the availablility of it to the people..
in an OZ like ..ancient biblical fear of anyone who is tenuously in power over smart-enough albeit honest people
gaining the upper hand in any way.
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08:05 PM on 03/25/2012
I forgot to mention the Gale portrayal...of Haymitch, rather...
When I heard that
Woody Harrelson was going to be playing Haymitch...
I was a bit offput...
I was thinking of a cross between Nick Nolte and Gerard Depardu...
Mathematically...
those two would have hit the number on the head...
in the roll of an inebriated enigma...
When I SAW Harrelson...
well a few minutes into his part,
anyway,
I thought great percy...
I was captivated by his eyes..
his mannerisms..
his amusement with the role in general.
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08:09 PM on 03/25/2012
great mercy...
I meant great mercy...
what else could I have meant?
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Dietcokefreak
Biden #1
11:12 AM on 03/26/2012
I agree, the character development between Katniss and Peeta was too fast as if they were trying to cut the movie so they cut that. Same with Rue.
11:42 AM on 03/25/2012
Of course, the Hunger Games is “Technologically Unsound” HAVE YOU READ THE BOOKS.

I get this is fiction, but if I cannot suspend disbelief while reading, then you have failed and that is what the unsound technology in this trilogy did, at least in my case.

The author took liberties that a 9-year-old boy wouldn’t while writing about the science and tech in this book. Each time she threw in one a piece of equipment, creature or medical procedure that defied the laws of physics, gravity, the capability of the human body or bioengineering on “earth” where the book is based, I wanted to put down the book and scream, “Do some damn research woman!”

So give me a break and do not waste your time trying to decipher the “Technology” in a movie based on a book where the author put more thought into the fashion and food then she did on the technology or common sense for that matter.
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BlackJAC
It's better to be a black king than a white knight
03:30 PM on 03/25/2012
The creators of Falling Skies couldn't be bothered to look at a map of Massachusetts when writing the pilot, so what makes you think that Suzanne Collins would have a technology advisor on speed-dial?
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Deborah Beck
Say What?
11:36 AM on 03/25/2012
I thought that the coal that was mined went to other poverty stricken districts. The capital and districts 1 and 2 appear to have varying degrees of technology but when the books get into description of other districts and how backward they are I just assumed that that was who the coal was delivered to.