Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
Faith, Freedom, and ‘The Hunger Games’
Faith, Freedom, and ‘The Hunger Games’
Jan 7, 2026 4:18 PM

In today’s Acton Commentary, “Secular Scapegoats and ‘The Hunger Games,'” I examine the themes of faith and freedom expressed in Suzanne Collins’ enormously popular trilogy. The film version of the first book hit the theaters this past weekend, and along with the release e a spate mentary critical of various aspects of Collins’ work.

As for faith and freedom, it turns out there’s precious little of either in Panem. But that’s not necessarily such a bad thing, as I argue in today’s piece: “If Panem is what a world without faith and freedom looks like, then Collins’ books are a cautionary tale about the spiritual, moral, and political dangers of materialism, hedonism, and oppression.”

Last week I was also privileged to participate in a collection of pieces at the Values & Capitalism website related to “The Hunger Games.” I provide an alternate ending (along with some explanation here) at the V&C site, where you can also check out the numerous other worthy reflections on Collins’ work.

One of the criticism’s of Collins’ work is that it isn’t specific (sorry, ideological) enough. Ilya Somin writes that “Collins’ world-building is relatively weak. We don’t learn very much about the political and economic system of Panem, and some of what we do learn is internally inconsistent. We don’t even know whether Panem’s economy is primarily capitalist or socialist. Are the coal mines mines where most of District 12′s population works owned by the government or by private firms? We are never told.”

On one level, I think plaint misses the point. We don’t need to know the details to know that Panem is ruled by an oppressive regime and to see the deleterious social, moral, and spiritual consequences. But we do seem to have enough information to make some basic assessments.

Over at Slate (HT: Kruse Kronicle), Matthew Yglesias writes about the economics of “extractive institutions,” noting that,

District 12 is a quintessential extractive economy. It’s oriented around a coal mine, the kind of facility where unskilled labor can be highly productive in light of the value of the modity. In a free society, petition for labor and union organizing would drive wages up. But instead the Capitol imposes a single purchaser of mine labor and offers subsistence wages. Emigration to other districts in search of better opportunities is banned, as is exploitation of the apparently bountiful resources of the surrounding forest. With the mass of Seam workers unable to earn a decent wage, even relatively privileged townsfolk have modest living standards. If mineworkers earned more money, the Mellark family bakery would have more customers and more incentive to invest in expanded operations. A growing service economy would grow up around the mine. But the extractive institutions keep the entire District in a state of poverty, despite the availability of advanced technology in the Capitol.

One of the key features of these “extractive economies” is that “once extractive institutions are established they’re hard to get rid of.” Indeed, the history of Central and South America in the age of the conquistadors displays this dynamic: “the typical pattern was for the new boss to simply seize control of the extractive institutions and run them for his own benefit.” The institutional inertia of this extractive logic (otherwise known as a form of corruption) is one of the reasons that I wrote my alternative ending to the trilogy the way I did.

So Yglesias says that Collins did well in being as sparse in the details as she is: “Collins wisely avoids going into detail about what life is supposed to be like in Districts specializing in luxury goods or electronics. It’s difficult to have a thriving economy in electronics production without petitive market featuring multiple buyers and multiple sellers.”

So the lack of ideological rigor or clarity criticized by Somin may in fact be a strength. (This is in part why The Hunger Games books might stack up favorably against Atlas Shrugged, for instance.) As my friend Ryan Reeves wrote in a review of the first book, “It’s difficult for many sci-fi authors to refrain from dwelling on every detail of the horrible, futuristic world. Collins keeps it reigned in and only reveals a bit here and there, leaving the rest up to the reader’s imagination.” It’s likewise clear that Collins is counting on the moral imagination of her readers to draw the necessary conclusions about tyranny.

As I conclude in today’s piece, “Collins’ story is ultimately about the injustice of such a world and the corresponding moral imperative to work, even to fight, to improve it. Indeed, the patent illegitimacy of any government whose existence depends on the oppression of its people, particularly its most vulnerable members (whether defined by class, creed, or color), is manifest throughout Collins’ books.”

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
The Netherlands Try To Cure ‘Dutch Disease’: Welfare State
wants to talk about disease and dysfunction. It’s not a medical condition, though; it’s an economic one. Far too few governments rein in their countries’ bloated welfare states before disaster strikes. As a result, some citizens eventually suffer the economic equivalent of a heart attack: wrenching declines in living standards as they are victimized by unsustainable programs’ endgame. Greece and the city of Detroit are only the most recent grim examples. The Dutch, Boskin says, seem to be making a...
The Ever-Persistent, Always-Destructive Myth of Overpopulation
The Nordic philosopher and priest Anders Chydenius (1729-1803) — the “Adam Smith of the North” — once asked: Would the Great Master, who adorns the valley with flowers and covers the cliff itself with grass and mosses, exhibit such a great mistake in man, his masterpiece, that man should not be able to enrich the globe with as many inhabitants as it can support? That would be a mean thought even in a Pagan, but blasphemy in a Christian, when...
Patheos Launches New Channel on Faith and Work
Patheos has just launched a new channel called MISSION:WORK, which aims to host a wide and varied discussion about faith and work. Led by senior editor Chris Armstrong of Bethel Seminary, the site will serve as a hub of sorts, drawing content from a variety of places, including the Acton Institute, to cultivate a conversation on whole-life discipleship. As described on the web site: “MISSION:WORK is a place where conversation happens about work and faith. We cover topics ranging from...
Calvin Coolidge on Cronyism and the Proper Role of Business
In November of 1925, President Calvin Coolidge delivered an address on the topic of the proper relationship between government and business. His audience was the New York State Chamber Commerce. One of Coolidge’s main aims of the speech was to elevate the spiritual value of business. As president, Coolidge oversaw unprecedented economic expansion and growth, but he also lived through the rise of America’s progressive era and Russia’s Bolshevik Revolution. New ideas about government and society had already long been...
Is Econ 101 Conservative Propaganda?
Is the teaching of basic microeconomics — opportunity cost, supply and demand curves, incentives, etc. — a form of conservative propaganda? Most people, including almost all economists whether liberal or conservatives, would obviously say “no.” Yet many educators, as well as the general public, believe it’s true. In 1994, the Federal Goals 2000 Act expanded the national standards movement to include the teaching of economics in K-12 education. This led to the creation in 1997 of the Voluntary National Content...
K Street Kronies: The Newest Action ‘Heroes’
Fighting off entrepreneurs! Taking on any threat to their power! Collect ’em all! ...
Dietrich Bonhoeffer on the search for Christian freedom
While imprisoned by the Nazis at Tegel military prison, and shortly after learning of the last failed attempt to assassinate Adolf Hitler, Dietrich Bonhoeffer penned a short poem for his friend, Eberhard Bethge, titled “Stations on the Road to Freedom.” e across the poem before, but in recently reading Eric Metaxas’ fine biography of the man, I was reminded of its power and potency in describing the essence of Christian freedom.It es all the pelling given its context, serving as...
‘Being Black At University Of Michigan’ (#BBUM) Students Should Transfer To Howard University
Contrary to the spirit of cooperation and solidarity, a group of black students at the University of Michigan believe they should receive some sort of special treatment because they are black. While the students may have legitimate concerns regarding campus culture, making outrageous demands is the least effective means of asking the administration to take their concerns seriously. In fact, given their unreasonable and unrealistic expectations it would be best if all of these protesting black students simply transferred to...
Rural Cuba and the tragedy of the commons
Michael J. Totten has a new piece on his travels through Cuba, this one focused on rural Cuba. “Most of the Cuban landscape I saw is already deforested,” he writes. “It’s just not being used. It’s tree-free and fallow ex-farmland. I’ve never seen anything like it, though parts of the Soviet Union may have looked similar.” Economists refer to this sort of thing as “the tragedy of mons,” and nobody does it well as munists. Parts of the travelogue are...
Handing Down Poverty, Mother To Daughter
The New York Times unwittingly highlights many of the points from the Acton Commentary, Maria Shriver’s Big, Big Government Rescue Plan For Women. In a piece entitled “Sarah’s Uncertain Path,” the Times takes a look at poverty in America, focusing on a pregnant 15 year old girl. Sarah’s family certainly has a rough go of it. And the Times would lead us to believe, just as the aforementioned Government Rescue Plan, that Sarah’s family and those like them are victims:...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2026 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved