The Hunger Games (Peeta's Camouflage)

Brief description

Peeta is an expert cake decorator, a skill that annoys Katniss, but that saves his life when he is badly wounded and camouflages himself, using mud and plants as body paint so his face and body are indistinguishable from the surroundings. This situation relates to visibility and evasion, but doesn't explicitly involve machine vision, although one can imagine the surveillance cameras being fooled by the camouflage.

Pull Quotes

I look more critically at the design on Peeta’s arm. The alternating pattern of light and dark suggests sunlight falling through the leaves in the woods. I wonder how he knows this, since I doubt he’s ever been beyond the fence. Has he been able to pick this up from just that scraggly old apple tree in his backyard? Somehow the whole thing—his skill, those inaccessible cakes, the praise of the camouflage expert—annoys me. “It’s lovely. If only you could frost someone to death,” I say. “Don’t be so superior. You can never tell what you’ll find in the arena. Say it’s actually a gigantic cake—” begins Peeta. Collins, Suzanne. The Hunger Games (Hunger Games Trilogy, Book 1) (p. 96). Scholastic Inc.. Kindle Edition.

“Peeta?” I whisper. “Where are you?” There’s no answer. Could I just have imagined it? No, I’m certain it was real and very close at hand, too. “Peeta?” I creep along the bank. “Well, don’t step on me.” I jump back. His voice was right under my feet. Still there’s nothing. Then his eyes open, unmistakably blue in the brown mud and green leaves. I gasp and am rewarded with a hint of white teeth as he laughs. It’s the final word in camouflage. Forget chucking weights around. Peeta should have gone into his private session with the Gamemakers and painted himself into a tree. Or a boulder. Or a muddy bank full of weeds. “Close your eyes again,” I order. He does, and his mouth, too, and completely disappears. Most of what I judge to be his body is actually under a layer of mud and plants. His face and arms are so artfully disguised as to be invisible. I kneel beside him. “I guess all those hours decorating cakes paid off.” Peeta smiles. “Yes, frosting. The final defense of the dying.” Collins, Suzanne. The Hunger Games (Hunger Games Trilogy, Book 1) (pp. 252-253). Scholastic Inc.. Kindle Edition.

Work that the situation appears in

Title Publication Type Year Creator
The Hunger Games (series) Narrative, Movie, Novel Suzanne Collins
Who does what?
This character
This character
Is
This technology
Aesthetic characteristics
Colours
Machine P.O.V
Not machine P.O.V.
Notes
The book and movie do not mention Peeta camouflage in relation to the surveillance cameras. It fools the human eyes of the other tributes. Katniss only sees him after he speaks to her and she looks more carefully. Presumably, the cameras would have captured and broadcast Peeta when he was painting himself, though this is not mentioned. This means it's arguable that this situation is not about machine vision. I have included it anyway because it seems to me to connect so well to anti-surveillance makeup. I have not added a relationship with technology, so the data won't be exported. -Jill, 22.01.2020

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