How the Hunger Games salute is fighting oppression in Thailand
The three-fingered salute has become a gesture of solidarity and defiance for the protesters in Bangkok, just as it is in Panem
The Guardian | 2 June 2014
Whenever films are accused of inspiring copycat behaviour, it is
invariably bad news: Death Wish, Child's Play and Natural Born Killers
are among those that have taken their turn as Exhibit A in the media
when the time has come to apportion blame for some tragedy or atrocity. (Even
a film as apparently innocuous as Bad Neighbours was cited by a US
critic last week as a possible catalyst for the murders carried out by
Elliot Rodger.) So it is something of an anomaly and a relief to find that reports of Hunger Games-inspired activity in Thailand do not refer to that country's adolescents being forced to participate in televised fights to the death.
Protesters demonstrating against the military, which seized power in last month's coup d'état,
have been spotted invoking the three-fingered salute used by the
oppressed population in the films of Suzanne Collins's young adult
science-fiction series. Civilians were initially urged to go about their
business as usual, but this became increasingly hard with military
barricades springing up around Bangkok and attempted demonstrations
being thwarted aggressively. In the wake of international news channels
such as CNN and the BBC being taken off air, as well as HBO and the
Disney Channel, it is especially significant that this small but pointed
gesture of protest should have sprung from popular culture.
You'd have to go back to the film adaptation of the graphic novel V For Vendetta,
written by Alan Moore and illustrated by David Lloyd, to find a
comparable crossover between on-screen behaviour and widespread
political iconography. That the movie was generally unloved (not least
by Moore himself) did nothing to stem the popularity of its central
image: a dandy Guy Fawkes mask that has become the all-purpose symbol
for the international protester-about-town. Members of the
activist-hackers group Anonymous were early adopters; Occupy Wall Street
also took up the mask in the fight against corporate greed. Stories
abounded about US police searching the homes of suspected hackers for
the masks. At least that's one advantage of the Hunger Games salute:
it's unlikely that anyone can be stitched up for possessing fingers.
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