Poverty, power, and politics are closely linked forces that have shaped societies throughout history. They define the lives of the underprivileged and those in power. When political decisions cause systemic poverty, the powerless become further suppressed while power becomes concentrated among the elite few. This vicious cycle is difficult to break.Â
Cliff Bacchus, in his novel Hungry Vipers, portrays this dynamic on personal and societal levels through the story of Churchill.Â
Power and Politics Perpetuating Poverty
Those in power often use politics to maintain an unequal status quo that keeps many impoverished. In the novel, the character President Hawkes exploits his political influence to control resources, public discourse, and the poor population. His tight grip over the Careeba Isle represents how entrenched governance systems control the masses.Â
This power imbalance is more of a tactic to ensure the poor remain dependent on political elites. Though aware of these controlling forces, like the character Churchill, these people struggle to break free from a system thriving on inequality.
Hungry Vipers and Real-World Injustice
The story’s protagonist is Churchill, a boy who grew up in the unforgiving slums on the island. He must navigate a society where wealth and power reside in the hands of a few elite people while most suffer from scarcity. Ever since he was a child, the lack of resources and social inequalities were quite evident to him, and so he dreamt of challenging this oppressive order.Â
The political environment in the book aptly mirrors the real-world authoritarian regimes that are suppressing marginalized voices through coercion and violence. The book also shows instances of an enforced communist system that demands loyalty over freedom. This reminds us how ideologies are far more potent tools to control populations. Poverty becomes not just deprivation but a political tool to ensure obedience, which is also happening in real-time.
Poverty as Weapon and Consequence
Hungry Vipers parallels the real world, where the poor survive on scraps and the elite fortify dominance over the system.
Bacchus depicts poverty as an active weapon of the powerful against the powerless. While the rich indulge, Churchill and his mother eat mud pies, desperate to fill their stomachs for the day. The poverty has taken a psychological toll on their identities and aspirations, but Churchill is still hopeful. Churchill’s journey allegorizes the roadblocks to social mobility where wealth and power concentrate.Â
Although the circumstances were dark and hope was bleak, Churchill’s story showed determination and dedication to raising his voice against injustice and systemic oppression. His unbreakable spirit catalyzed widespread change, which we can read further in Cliff Bacchus’s book Hungry Vipers.Â
Grab your copy now on Amazon.Â