Abstract 
Suzanne Collins’ novel, The Hunger Games portrays a dystopian society where the powerful maintain control through manipulation, spectacle, and punishment. The annual Hunger Games serve as a means to reinforce authority while forcing young tributes into a brutal survival game dictated by physical skill, deception, and strategic alliances. This paper analyzes the novel’s themes of power, control, survival, and deception, exploring how the Capitol uses the Games to assert dominance. At the same time, the tributes navigate the competition as their only means of existence. A thematic analysis of the novel focuses on how the Games function as both entertainment and oppression, the role of manipulation in survival, and the broader implications of performance in a controlled society. The study examines key characters such as Katniss, Peeta, Rue, and the Careers to illustrate the complex interplay of trust, deceit, and strategy. The analysis reveals that the Games are about physical endurance, intelligence, political maneuvering, and social strategy. The Capitol erases individual identity and emotions, reinforcing control through spectacle. However, tributes like Katniss and Peeta subvert these dynamics by using performance and deception to challenge authority. The novel critiques a society where power is sustained through manipulation and perception. It demonstrates that survival extends beyond the arena, emphasizing the ethical and emotional costs of strategic performance in both dystopian and real-world settings.
Keywords: Deception, Dystopia, Manipulation, Power, Spectacle, Survival.