Katniss Everdeen, and Character Strength from Unexpected Sources

Sep 15, 2011 18:09

The promised essay for womenlovefest. Some of this is taken from comments I made at Mark Reads; a lot of it is new. HUGE GIANT SPOILERS for Mockingjay, so be warned.

Katniss Everdeen, and Character Strength from Unexpected Sources
by PuelKatniss Everdeen is not the easiest character to like. She's distrustful, judgmental, and prickly; she reacts to kindness ( Read more... )

fandom: the hunger games, meta(stasis), challenge: we♥the women the fandom hates

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Comments 73

thatonekimgirl September 16 2011, 05:08:02 UTC
Love this.

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puella_nerdii September 16 2011, 05:42:43 UTC
Thank you! I'm so glad you took the time to read it.

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eevilalice September 16 2011, 05:17:48 UTC
OMG THANK YOU so much for this. It's what I've wanted to write, what's been lingering in the back of my own mind, since reading so many others' thoughts on Katniss and simply being astonished. I loved her the whole way through the series (probably because, as I say to friends, we're the same brand of emotionally retarded!) for the reasons you've explained here so eloquently. I'm so bookmarking this and sharing.

Have to highlight this: Maybe, but it illustrates why the whole Team Peeta versus Team Gale thing misses the point. It's never really been about the boys; it's about the worldview Katniss wants to adopt, and how she wants to conduct the revolution and her life. Katniss sees the kind of destruction wrought by the anger and self-interest and violent retaliation (and yes, pain) that Gale embodies.

I adored both Peeta and Gale through the course of the first two books, but when it came to Mockingjay, I began to be uneasy about Gale, then flat-out disappointed and angry re: the Nut. And it's because of the worldview Gale ( ... )

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puella_nerdii September 16 2011, 05:42:16 UTC
Thank you! And ha, yeah, Katniss does kind of get an F in emotions, but it's one of the things I kind of love about her (much as I want to, er, gently take her aside and point a few things out to her sometimes).

One question: what did you make of Katniss voting for the Games (for Prim--revenge) near the end of Mockingjay?I thought it was a ruse to gain Coin's confidence -- well, the second time I read the chapter, anyway (the first time I was screaming WHAT THE FUCK KATNISS NO HOW COULD YOU). Coin's been side-eyeing Katniss from the beginning and there's probably no way she'd let Katniss near a weapon if Katniss seemed to be going against her agenda. (Boggs said as much a few chapters back. Sob. Boggs.) And Haymitch sided with her because he does understand her -- and knows she'd never agree to this kind of thing unless she had some other plan she was working towards. Much like Haymitch himself, really. The paragraph before Katniss kills Coin, she talks about how she and Snow had agreed not to lie to each other, which was a tip-off ( ... )

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eevilalice September 16 2011, 05:58:19 UTC
You know what? I misremembered Katniss only thinking "for Prim" instead of actually saying it out loud, which is a huge part of why I thought she really meant it. I literally just grabbed my book and checked! She also looks at the rose...

I really need to re-read the books, lol. But I'm going to wait until after the movies.

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limbomonkey September 16 2011, 17:18:45 UTC
Obviously, Collins wanted Coin's death to have a big "WAIT WHAT JUST HAPPENED" punch, so she couldn't reveal too much of what Katniss was thinking, but I don't think Katniss ever intended for the Games to happen again.

Yes, but I just feel she (Collins) still would have put some textual support in Katniss's thoughts to clue the reader in, even if it didn't make sense to us then. But her thoughts there seem so entrenched in the black/white, games or kill everyone, two bad choices thing. I didn't see Katniss's Eureka moment/choosing the third option until she faces Snow.

Sorry I keep ranting on your journal.

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peskywhistpaw September 16 2011, 06:06:11 UTC
It's never really been about the boys; it's about the worldview Katniss wants to adopt, and how she wants to conduct the revolution and her life.

Lovely. You're so right.

Recovery is a neverending process, and there isn't an endpoint after which everything becomes magically okay, but it's a struggle and a journey worth engaging in, and sometimes the most important thing isn't the progress you've made but the fact that you're trying to move forward at all. That's Katniss's real strength over the course of the series-and it's a testament to her growth as a character that she's able to develop enough empathy to see rebuilding as a possibility.

Again, so right, and very well put. It always amazes me that the only thing Katniss really completely fails at is giving up. I don't know how she does it.

This is a really great essay. Thanks for sharing!

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puella_nerdii September 16 2011, 14:50:32 UTC
And thank you for reading it!

It always amazes me that the only thing Katniss really completely fails at is giving up. I don't know how she does it.
Oh god, neither do I. Were I in her shoes, I think I'd pull up the covers and stay in bed for the rest of my life. But she doesn't do that, and that alone is kind of amazing.

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burning_pile September 16 2011, 06:12:09 UTC
This is great! I am constantly irritated when I see people complain about Katniss 'leading the boys along' because I think it's missing the point; the series hinges around her own personal journey and both Peeta and Gale are just part of that. This was a very clean and impressive essay. Bookmarking.

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puella_nerdii September 16 2011, 15:00:22 UTC
*nod* Definitely. (And given everything else that Katniss -- who's still seventeen, for crying out loud -- is dealing with over the course of the series, is it any surprise that choosing between Peeta and Gale isn't at the top of her list of priorities?)

Thanks for reading!

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puella_nerdii September 16 2011, 15:08:15 UTC
Ah, thank you so much. ♥ I think I fell in love with the series all over again while writing this, too -- the central narrative is the type of story that always resonates for me, and revisiting it in this essay made me remember that.

And yes, that's more than fine! I posted the whole thing on my tumblr here, if you'd like to reblog that, or you can link to this post -- whichever's easiest.

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