Gladiatorial contests: Difference between revisions

From Feminist SF Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(pretty sure)
(hunger games)
 
Line 28: Line 28:


* pretty sure there was at least one [[Star Trek]] with these plot, and maybe a [[Xena]]
* pretty sure there was at least one [[Star Trek]] with these plot, and maybe a [[Xena]]
; dystopia / reality show version
* ''[[The Hunger Games]]'' & sequels, by [[Suzanne Collins]]


==See also==
==See also==
Line 34: Line 38:


[[Category:Social themes]]
[[Category:Social themes]]
[[category:Themes and tropes by name]]

Latest revision as of 10:07, 7 June 2010

Gladiatorial contests are a recurrent theme of fascination in fiction and in SF.

Typically works that feature societies with gladiatorial contests are intended to suggest thmes associated with the fall of the Roman Empire: a debased and inhumane populace, with the wealthy able to satisfy any vices, the poor subject to slavery or abuse, a lack of ethics protecting the weak and disenfranchised, and a lack of religious codes restricting various sexual or other codes.

Characters may be sent to compete in gladiatorial contests, to show their nobility of spirit, strength, fighting skills, etc.

In a number of works featuring gender division, men are disempowered directly or indirectly, but have a major role as athletic competition.

examples



A bunch of stories feature people (sometimes, "people") kidnapped, brainwashed, or in some other way enslaved and forced to compete in gladiatorial-style contests:



  • pretty sure there was at least one Star Trek with these plot, and maybe a Xena


dystopia / reality show version

See also