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Analysis Of Margaret Atwood 's The Handmaid 's Tale

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In Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, we meet Offred, or so they call her, a Handmaid in the Republic of Gilead, a futuristic dystopian society. Gilead tarnished traditional values and replaced them with shear corruption after the rebels killed the President as well as most of Congress, took over the government, and decided to throw out the constitution. Instead the society relies on the bible to justify its barbaric rules, limitations and practices. In a totalitarian society of decreasing birth rates, the only fertile women left, the Handmaids, keep this fear stricken society alive by giving birth for the older, elite yet infertile couples. With fear comes misogyny, where we not only see men using women, but controlling and …show more content…

Because of the divide, not only did the men as the power structures in society oppress the women, but the upper class women oppressed the lower class. Gilead began its dehumanization of Offred in the simplest yet demeaning ways. Gilead used a color-coding system for its residents where each class group wore a certain color. No one is an individual but part of a bigger group. This practice strips Offred and others of their identity because they wear the same thing, perform the same duties, and expected to act the same as everyone else in their group. It also provides a prime example of the conflict between the genders. Also, not once is her real name ever mentioned. “My name isn’t Offred, I have another name, which nobody uses now because it’s forbidden. I tell myself it doesn’t matter, your name is like your telephone number, useful only to others” (Atwood 84). Yet, Offred holds on to her real name, hoping she will reclaim it one day. This shows the she does indeed miss certain aspects of her past life, including her old self when she had her own name not the one assigned to her, which drives her motivation to overcome those who overcame her. Through giving her an impersonal name, Gilead begins to detach Offred’s body, used as a reproductive instrument from her individuality. The irony is that Handmaids are the most valuable people in the society, but not treated as so, which plays into the oppression of Gilead’s female population. The most

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