Skip to content

MuggleNet

  • Site
    • Contact Us & FAQ
    • History
    • Meet the Team
    • MuggleNet Live!
    • Press
    • Publications
    • Special Projects
    • Volunteer with Us!
    • Year in Review
  • Podcasts
    • Alohomora!
    • Full Circle
    • LITHAPPENS
    • Potterversity
    • Promptly Potter
    • SpeakBeasty
  • Harry Potter
    • Book Quotes
    • Book Series
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Film Series
    • Hogwarts Library
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • Fantastic Beasts
    • Book
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Fantastic Beasts Film Quotes
    • Film Series
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • The Quibbler
    • Owl Post
    • Bathilda’s Notebook
    • The Department of MYTHteries
    • The Dirigible Plum
    • Into the Floo
    • Muggle Studies
    • The Pensieve Papers
    • The Three Broomsticks
    • April Fools’
    • The Quibbler Vault
  • The Daily Prophet
    • Book Trolley
    • Editorials
    • Event Reports
    • Exclusive Interviews
    • Features
    • Giveaways
    • Listicles
    • Merchandise Reviews
    • Movie Reviews
    • Television Reviews
    • Theater Reviews
    • Wizolympics
  • Muggle World
    • Charity
    • Exhibitions
    • J.K. Rowling
    • MinaLima
    • Quadball
    • Studio Tours
    • Theatrical Play
    • Theme Parks
    • Wizarding World Digital
  • Fans & Fun
    • Crazy Caption Contest
    • Fan Focus
    • Fandom
    • Fandom Sortings
    • Fandom Timeline
    • Fun Lists
    • Games and Trivia
    • GNOMEs
    • Potter DIY
    • Potter Weddings
    • #PotterItForward
    • Rosmerta’s Recipes
    • Song Parodies
    • Wizard Rock
    • Wizarding Wordle
  • Site
    • Contact Us & FAQ
    • History
    • Meet the Team
    • MuggleNet Live!
    • Press
    • Publications
    • Special Projects
    • Volunteer with Us!
    • Year in Review
  • Podcasts
    • Alohomora!
    • Full Circle
    • LITHAPPENS
    • Potterversity
    • Promptly Potter
    • SpeakBeasty
  • Harry Potter
    • Book Quotes
    • Book Series
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Film Series
    • Hogwarts Library
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • Fantastic Beasts
    • Book
    • Coloring Books
    • Film Companions
    • Fantastic Beasts Film Quotes
    • Film Series
    • Little Things
    • Music
    • Video Games
  • The Quibbler
    • Owl Post
    • Bathilda’s Notebook
    • The Department of MYTHteries
    • The Dirigible Plum
    • Into the Floo
    • Muggle Studies
    • The Pensieve Papers
    • The Three Broomsticks
    • April Fools’
    • The Quibbler Vault
  • The Daily Prophet
    • Book Trolley
    • Editorials
    • Event Reports
    • Exclusive Interviews
    • Features
    • Giveaways
    • Listicles
    • Merchandise Reviews
    • Movie Reviews
    • Television Reviews
    • Theater Reviews
    • Wizolympics
  • Muggle World
    • Charity
    • Exhibitions
    • J.K. Rowling
    • MinaLima
    • Quadball
    • Studio Tours
    • Theatrical Play
    • Theme Parks
    • Wizarding World Digital
  • Fans & Fun
    • Crazy Caption Contest
    • Fan Focus
    • Fandom
    • Fandom Sortings
    • Fandom Timeline
    • Fun Lists
    • Games and Trivia
    • GNOMEs
    • Potter DIY
    • Potter Weddings
    • #PotterItForward
    • Rosmerta’s Recipes
    • Song Parodies
    • Wizard Rock
    • Wizarding Wordle
  • Features / The Daily Prophet

Harry Potter and the Chosen Ones: Katniss Everdeen

by Nathalia Velez · March 18, 2017

Some heroes are chosen, some heroes choose, and sometimes, it’s just complicated. Our favorite hero, Harry Potter, was pre-destined to defeat Voldemort, yet he still makes the choice to face his destiny with courage. It’s not quite as straightforward for dystopian hero Katniss Everdeen in the Hunger Games series.

Survival is Katniss’s primary concern, but she puts her life at risk when she volunteers to enter the Hunger Games (where 12 boys and 12 girls fight to the death with only one victor) in place of her sister. Katniss had taken on the role of protector after her father’s death left her mother paralyzed by grief, and it’s this sense of protection that drives her to risk her life to save Primrose from an almost-certain death. Harry often displays this type of self-sacrifice, constantly insisting on risking himself in place of his friends.

 

Source

 

When Katniss makes the choice to enter the competition, she is not consciously making a choice to become a hero or the face of the revolution. It’s her continual refusal to play by the rules and her instinct to survive that catapults her into the public eye as a figure of the rebellion. After surviving the first Hunger Games, the rebellion and its orchestrators choose Katniss as the symbol of their revolution. Harry finds himself in a similarly unwanted spotlight because the entire wizarding community knows him as a hero (or a liar, depending on who you ask).

Ever reluctant to do what she’s told, Katniss doesn’t immediately accept her role, but she does understand the necessity of the revolution and does her part—in her own way. Harry faces a similar decision when Minister Scrimgeour asks him to publicly show his support for the Ministry, but Harry chooses not to act as a figurehead and follows his own secret mission to destroy the Horcruxes instead.

 

Source

 

Both Harry and Katniss live in a world at war, and that brings about other similarities in their stories. Harry can’t rely on the Ministry of Magic (especially since they spent an entire year trying to convince people that he can’t be trusted), and Katniss can’t exactly trust President Coin from District 13, even though they are all outwardly working for the same cause.

That doesn’t mean they can’t trust anyone. Much like Harry discovers that Snape has been trying to help and protect him (however reluctantly and for his own selfish reasons), Katniss finds herself receiving help from an alliance of previous victors led by an unlikely source on the other side, Plutarch Heavensbee.

 

Source

 

In both cases, the Chosen Ones were not given all the details of the master plan. Dumbledore didn’t clue Harry in on the fact that he has asked Snape to kill him, and Katniss wasn’t told that she was part of an alliance that was working to sabotage the 75th Hunger Games. For Katniss, more so than for Harry, this creates a sense of distrust in everyone—even those who are “on her side”—and she generally prefers to follow her own plan.

Harry and Katniss’s paths grow further apart as they reach the end of their respective missions. Harry faithfully follows what he understands to be his destiny: die in order to destroy the final Horcrux and come back to finish Voldemort. Katniss, on the other hand, acts like she’s going to do what everyone expects of her—kill President Snow—but she decides to kill Coin instead because she sees the danger in allowing her to have the power she has been craving.

 

Source

 

Katniss creates her own destiny. While she was chosen to represent the majority of Panem and goes along with the plan to serve as the symbol to rally the districts together, in the end, she disagrees with the decisions the leaders of the rebellion have made and follows her instinct instead.

 

 

Both stories deal with the dark side of power, and both feature heroes who don’t seek power for themselves. Harry and Katniss fight the good fight only because they think it’s the right thing to do. Like Harry, Katniss’s only wish is for the war to end so she can live a peaceful life—if she survives.

Social:

  • Next story Role Call: Big Bad Woolf
  • Previous story Jim Kay Nominated for Kate Greenaway Medal

MuggleNet Archive

Important Dates

July 2025

Tue, Jul 1

MuggleNet Interactive's anniversary
Recurs yearly

2004

Rufus Scrimgeour becomes Minister of Magic
Recurs yearly

1996

Wed, Jul 2

Edward Randell's birthday
Recurs yearly

Justin Finch-Fletchley

Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets book (UK)
Recurs yearly

1998

Mon, Jul 7

Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows - Part 2 movie (London premiere)
Recurs yearly

2011

MuggleNet podcasts are sponsored in part by Secretlab.

Thanks to its research-backed ergonomic design, including a proprietary 4-way adaptive lumbar support system, the Secretlab TITAN Evo Harry Potter Edition will comfortably support you even when you’re up to no good.

Did You Know

During the Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s/Sorcerer’s Stone film, viewers can hear Rubeus Hagrid playing Hedwig’s Theme on a flute right before the trio approaches and asks him about obtaining Norbert.

Potter History

June 21, 2003 – Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix is released in the United States and the United Kingdom, with midnight release parties being held around the world.

Potter Quote

“I’m worth twelve of you, Malfoy.”

MuggleNet is an unofficial Harry Potter fansite.
Please email us if you have any questions or concerns.
© 1999–2025 MuggleNet.com. All rights reserved.
Privacy Policy | COPPA Policy | Terms of Use | Feedback


MuggleNet is a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program and Bookshop.org's affiliate program, affiliate advertising programs designed to provide a means for sites to earn advertising fees by advertising and linking to amazon.com and bookshop.org.