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  1. The dresses Cinna designs for Katniss not only give Katniss her epithet, “the girl who was on fire,” but also come to symbolize her spirit. Cinna designs the first dress to reflect the main industry of Katniss’s home district, coal mining, and since coal’s purpose is to burn, Cinna creates a dress that would be lit with synthetic flames.

  2. Fire is an important motif that reappears throughout The Hunger Games trilogy. During the Capitol Arena bombing, Coriolanus Snow was trapped underneath a burning beam, but Lucy Gray Baird was able to free him.

  3. Fire. Fire is one of the most powerful symbols throughout The Hunger Games trilogy. At various times, it represents passion, rebellion, transformation, destruction, anger, and hatred. It also represents Katniss herself, "the girl who was on fire."

  4. The three-finger salute has been used by Scouting and Girl Guides since 1908. Inspired by its use in The Hunger Games, the three-finger salute has been used in protests since 2014, primarily to protest military coups and oppressive governments in Southeast Asian countries.

  5. Fire. Fire plays different roles throughout the story, but most often it represents Katniss. Notably, fire is the element that gives the various outfits Cinna designs for Katniss their character. Her first dress, for example, is covered in synthetic flames, while later outfits use fire more subtly but still maintain it as a motif.

  6. Reality Television. The Hunger Games are reality television squared. With rippling walls of fire and swarms of deadly mutant hornets, the trials in the arena are kind of like Panem's version of Survivor – but deadli...

  7. Need help on symbols in Suzanne Collins's The Hunger Games? Check out our detailed analysis. From the creators of SparkNotes.