You are on page 1of 1

Análisis:

https://escribiendoruido.wordpress.com/2015/12/08/los-juegos-del-hambre/
https://escribiendoruido.wordpress.com/2015/12/08/los-juegos-del-hambre/
https://bookanalysis.com/suzanne-collins/the-hunger-games/themes-analysis/
https://www.sparknotes.com/lit/the-hunger-games/plot-analysis/
Resúmenes:
https://www.gradesaver.com/los-juegos-del-hambre/guia-de-estudio/summary-primera-
parte-los-tributos-cap%C3%ADtulo-i

At a Glance:
• Full Title The Hunger Games
• Author Suzanne Collins
• Type Of Work Novel
• Genre Dystopia
• Language English
• Time And Place Written Connecticut, United States, in the mid- to late-2000s
• Date Of First Publication September 2008
• Publisher Scholastic
In-depth Facts:
• Narrator Katniss Everdeen narrates The Hunger Games as the events of the novel occur.
• Point Of View The story is told in the first person and recounts the narrator’s personal history
and experiences. The narrator is mostly objective, but on occasion she will imagine what other
characters must be feeling.
• Tone Mostly stoic, but occasionally very emotional
• Tense Present
• Setting (Time) An indeterminate time more than one hundred years in the future
• Setting (Place) Panem, the country created after the governments of North America collapsed
• Protagonist Katniss Everdeen
• Major Conflict Katniss must endure numerous deadly ordeals, navigate complex personal
relationships, and learn to control how others perceive her in order to survive the Hunger
Games.
• Rising Action After volunteering to take her sister’s place in the Hunger Games, Katniss has
to manage others’ perceptions of her to gain the best strategic advantage possible, then learn
to survive inside the arena.
• Climax Having outlasted the other tributes, Katniss and Peeta threaten suicide rather than
fight one another after a rule change turns them from allies into adversaries.
• Falling Action Even though she and Peeta won the Hunger Games, Katniss must try to
assuage the Capitol, which is angry with Katniss for threatening suicide and forcing a decision
they didn’t like.
• Themes The inequality between rich and poor; suffering as entertainment; the importance of
appearances
• Motifs Fire, defiance, hunting
• Symbols Mockingjay, Panem, Katniss’s dresses
• Foreshadowing Katniss demonstrates her ability to hunt and forage in order to survive;
Madge gives Katniss the mockingjay pin; Peeta excels at the camouflage station in training;
Katniss saves the berries that killed Foxface.

You might also like