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Of all the books, Catching Fire is my favorite, so I'm almost vibrating with excitement over the release of a new trailer yesterday at San Diego Comic Con, and the chance to see our named victors in their arena costumes.
Some thoughts I had watching the new trailer:(
spoilers, obviously )
I buy that. Power is the most immediate and fundamental of the Capitol's needs. Food can be stockpiled, but it's a lot harder to store power. That has to buy some leverage.
if you want to play to type, a district full of engineering nerds doesn't need fresh veggies or want anything that requires too much cooking. ;) Just give us ramen, please.
I hadn't thought of that, but what the heck, that does sound about right; all D3 really needs is a healthy supply of Twizzlers and Red Bull. :D
CLASS DIVIDES YES LET'S TALK ABOUT THAT, I see that the most in D1 randomly, between the ones who make the pretty things and the ones who do the mining, but I think D3 would have a pretty sharp intellectual divide on top of that. You'd have engineers who look down on the menial jobs and then a kind of anti-intellectualism from the ones who actually do the grunt-work. Not enough to be hugely divisive, but enough to stem any attempts at rebellion for a good long time.
That's about the way I'm picturing it. I think there's some simmering resentment among the laborer class, principally based on the better wages and (apparently, though it may in some circumstances be debatable) better hours/conditions that the scientist class have. In my headcanon, after individuals have solidified their status (generally, by the time they're in college/grad school), scientist class members have a greater range of options for work, and there's actual competitive recruitment among privately and government-owned companies and academia to lure/retain them. There are also probably more people who could be doing scientific or middle management support work than there are positions to accommodate them, so for at least some portion of the population I'm thinking there's also the soul-deadening discomfort that comes with that. On the part of the scientists, I'm thinking that there's probably some hubris (and it doesn't help that many of them may be less socially skilled).
As you say, I don't think this would be enough to keep them from eventually banding together against the Capitol, but I think this system could result in a bit of distrust between the classes; they may not coordinate their efforts well, initially. I also think the system could be rough on families; I can imagine a lot of resentment where one sibling is suddenly singled out for special attention and eventually able to move up a step in quality of life, and conversely, how lost and alone a sibling who 'doesn't cut it' must feel when s/he is not able to meet expectations and suffers a diminution in prospects.
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