Propaganda for Kids: Comparing IS-Produced Propaganda to Depictions of Propaganda in The Hunger Games and Harry Potter Film Series

Authors

  • Katherine A. Elder University of Southern California

Keywords:

Harry Potter, Hunger Games, propaganda, Islamic State

Abstract

The Harry Potter and The Hunger Games films are wildly popular with adolescents and adults alike, despite touching on themes that parallel the horrors in our own world’s geopolitical climate. The Islamic State (IS) promotes its own messages of violence, brutality, and even utopia through sophisticated propaganda disseminated via social media. This article discusses the extent to which propaganda depicted in Harry Potter and The Hunger Games approximates—in content and/or medium—that produced by IS in recent years. Propaganda in the Harry Potter films, largely produced in written form, resembles propaganda of the past, whereas propaganda in The Hunger Games makes use of contemporary mediums and techniques that resemble that which originates from IS. It is worthwhile to explore whether fiction provides audiences with a realistic portrayal of propaganda, as it may assist viewers in turning a critical eye toward the themes and technologies that are used in their own world to disseminate propaganda.

Author Biography

Katherine A. Elder, University of Southern California

Post-Doctoral Fellow, The University of Texas Health Science center at Houston, School of Public Health in AustinPhD, Annenberg School for Communication and Journalism at the University of Southern CaliforniaMPAff, Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, the University of Texas at Austin(619) 244-2757

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Published

2018-02-14

Issue

Section

Articles