The Hunger Games is a book by Suzanne Collins, which is narrated by a sixteen year-old girl named Katniss Everdeen who lives in a dystopian post-apocalyptic nation of Panem in North America. The Capitol, a highly advanced metropolis, exercises political control over the rest of the nation. The Hunger Games are an annual event in which one boy and one girl aged 12–18 from each of the twelve districts surrounding the Capitol are selected by lottery to compete in a televised battle to the death. Some over arching themes in the book is politics and an overbearing government. This can be seen through the social hierarchy that the …show more content…
In the book, The Republic Plato talks about how there are three classes to have a perfect society. The three classes are Guardians, Auxiliaries and Producers. The guardians ruled the just society which governed not their own interests but for the good of the people. These philosopher-kings are the opposite of a tyrant like President Snow. A tyrant is the most unjust type of ruler, according to Socrates: “inevitably envious, untrustworthy, unjust, friendless, impious, host and nurse to every kind of vice. On the one hand, we admire Katniss ' courage and Peeta Mellarks’s compassion. In those respects, most of us agree that they’re good models to imitate. Socrates would have agreed, too. On the other hand, some people worry about how other aspects of the story might affect its readers’ souls. Could all the brutal killings traumatize young readers or desensitize them to violence? Should we be disturbed that one of the story’s heroes, Haymitch Abernathy, is a raging alcoholic? It was because of similar concerns that Socrates proposed that the rulers of his ideal society should closely monitor the types of mousike- available to young people and weigh the potentially beneficial or harmful