Hey, germane to this discussion, this is a sample character analysis I wrote of Katniss, part of the sample set I wrote that got me the Shmoop job (it's written for a student audience).
Character Analysis – Katniss Everdeen from Catching Fire by Suzanne Collins
Katniss Everdeen took on the system in Hunger Games, and became The Girl on Fire, a symbol for every citizen of Panem who chokes on the yoke placed upon them by the totalitarian government. After winning the Games, she returns to her life in District 12.
What’s Love Got To Do With It? “All I was doing was trying to keep myself and Peeta alive. Any act of rebellion was purely coincidental. But when the Capitol decrees that only one tribute can live, and you have the audacity to challenge it, I guess that becomes rebellion in itself. My only defense was pretending I had been driven insane by a passionate love for Peeta. So we were both allowed to live. To be crowned victors. To go home and celebrate and wave good-bye to the cameras and be left alone. Until now” (17).
After the Games, Katniss ignored Peeta and resumed her friendship with Gale. But in the eyes of the public, she and Gale are cousins, and she is in love with Peeta. However, that she and Gale continue to see each other is seen by many – including President Snow -- as a sign of Katniss’ rebellion, and she has to convince everyone she’s in love with Peeta on their Victory Tour. If not, Snow will have Gale killed. Katniss continues to be a very pragmatic person. She doesn’t make a fuss, she’s focused on the bottom line: don’t get anyone I love killed. So she pretends again, to be so in love with Peeta that she would die for him. Problem is, Katniss is a pretty direct person, and this level of emotional pretense is pretty hard to keep up. It’s also confusing, since she’s not really sure exactly how she feels about Peeta. Her declaration of love was a play to win the game, but he really loves her. (And you thought your romantic relationships were complicated.)
Also, she’s painted herself into a corner. Sure, pretending she and Peeta were in love saved both their lives, but now she’s stuck. She HAS to marry Peeta when she’s older. Otherwise, the relationship will be seen as a lie, and the government will have to take steps to correct the show of rebellion. Messy, bloody, permanent steps. Katniss is tormented by the knowledge that she has to stay away from Gale if she wants him to keep on living.
Katniss struggles with her conflicting emotions for Peeta and Gale. She’s known Gale her whole life. He understands her, and she him. But she and Peeta have been thrown together in some emotionally charged life-or-death situations; Peeta’s been in love with her a while, and has demonstrated his willingness to die for her. That's two pretty powerful things competing with each other. Katniss’ feelings for Peeta start to change – and she truly is willing to die for him this time – but this comes about only after she thinks that she is going to die again in the Quarter Quell Games, and has no chance, ever, of being with Gale.
Stand In The Place Where You Live Because Katniss manipulated the government into letting her and Peeta live, she’s become a symbol of rebellion. Katniss has been pretty self-interested (understandably -- that whole life or death thing), but she starts to have to look outward. She knows now that the government is corrupt, that President Snow is about as trustworthy as a cat in a tuna factory, and that Panem is completely messed up, but she really hasn’t contemplated her role in the world. But on the Victory Tour, she really starts to get a clearer view. If she continues only to look toward her own self-interest, she will be the kind of person she despises. She must take a stand and fight the power. Cue Public Enemy.
I Am The Mockingjay – Cu-Cu-Ca-Choo
Katniss unknowingly keeps on referencing the mockingjay – when she wears the pin, when she talks to Rue’s district during the Victory tour -- (continued...)