English, asked by saimanikanta3865, 10 months ago

THE HERO'S JOURNEY
by Jessica McBirney
How does the author’s discussion of "The Hobbit" and "The Hunger Games" contribute to the development of ideas in the text? Cite evidence from the text in your response.

Answers

Answered by rajesh9717620604
2

Answer:

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Answered by canojj6392
1

Sorry if this is bad, I'm not that good at finding evidence. :/

The author’s discussion of "The Hobbit" and "The Hunger Games" contributes to the development of the ideas in the text by giving us an example of popular series that follow these set of ideas. If we follow these ideas we can see that these series follow these sets of ideas, such as "The story usually opens with the hero’s normal life: their ordinary world." This is true for the hunger games where Katniss lives in a district that is ordinary to the people living there. We see her talk about her life and experiences living there and about how she hunts animals for her family. Another piece of evidence that furthers our claim is, “It could be an event, a discovery, an added danger, or something new from within the hero. It requires the hero to do something; they are the only person who can fulfill this call or accomplish this goal.” This evidence gives another example of “the Hobbit” and “the Hunger Games”, in “The Hobbit” begins its adventure when Gandalf comes to Bilbo's home and invites him on an adventure. In “The Hunger Games” Katniss must volunteer to go in place of her younger sister. All in all, the reference to these series helps us better understand the development of the ideas in the text.

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