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Essay On The Handmaid's Tale And 1984

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Fear Factor

I know you go the library everyday after school. I know you work twenty two hours a week at Taco Bell, and make three cents over the minimum wage. I am the government of a strict, totalitarian society, and I provoke fear and take away freedoms from all of my fellow citizens. Through reading Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid's Tale and George Orwell’s 1984, it becomes evident that both novels discuss the differences in gender roles. In 1984, there is gender equality amongst the classes. However, The Handmaid’s Tale shows very different roles for each gender and the importance of each as well. The differing gender roles give the government an incentive to present discipline in their own unique ways, deciding whether to give …show more content…

purpose was to remove all pleasure...All marriages between Party members had to be approved by a committee appointed for the purpose, and...permission was always refused if the couple concerned gave the impression of being physically attracted to one another...There were even organizations such as the Junior, Anti-Sex League, which advocated complete celibacy for both sexes. All children were to be begotten by artificial insemination. (Orwell 65,66)
Both genders are given the same rights and rules, depending on their level in society. Neither are allowed to feel pleasure, be attracted to one another, and both are encouraged to stay celibate. This society shows a good amount of gender equality in contrast to the society in The Handmaid's Tale, where the women are unequal to each other: “There are other women with baskets, some in red, some in the dull green of the Marthas, some in the striped dresses, red and blue and green and cheap and skimp, that mark the women of the poorer men. Econowives, they're called. These women are not divided into functions. They have to do everything; if they can” (Atwood 24). The women are split up so that not every woman has the same freedoms and rules as others; there are separate classes just for women. However, all women in general “can’t hold property” (Atwood 178). This means that while some women have more freedoms than other women, they all still have less freedom than men. Women are also treated differently because of the

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