Contextualizing ‘Survival of the Fittest’ and American Politics through Young Adult Dystopian Cinema
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University of Tlemcen
Abstract
This research aims at contextualizing YA dystopias as powerful media agents that articulate our
realities. The work opted for two case studies, The Maze Runner Trilogy and The Hunger
Games series, both of which are categorized as Young Adult dystopian Science Fiction in
which the emphasis of this thesis is given to the way these movies tap into the political
landscape and precisely that of the United States. Hence, the research follows a poststructuralist
approach and a semiotic contextual study. It examines concepts such as ‘survival of the Fittest’,
white supremacy, biological tyranny, neocolonialism. All these concepts are analyzed within
the films to reflect real-life issues. This thesis also explores the intersection of politics, film,
and television, and examines how young adult dystopian media transcoded messages including,
colonialism, capitalism which were circulating at the time. By reading two popular objects, the
complete Hunger Games series and The Maze Runner Trilogy, this project suggests that these
cultural artifacts, and the young adult dystopian genre, provides a space for exploring issues of
concern in our own society.