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How The Handmaids Are Trapped In The Handmaid's Tale

Satisfactory Essays

This quotation is said by the narrator, Offred, during her daily shopping with Ofglen. In the novel, The Handmaid's Tale by Margaret Attwood, the narrator, Offred, compares herself and other handmaids to the rats inside a maze. Both the handmaids and rats are trapped and oblivious of the outside world. When rats are placed in a maze, they are unaware that they are trapped. Slowly, the rats adapt to the maze and believe they are free. Similarly, the handmaids are trapped in the Republic of Gilead. Every day, the handmaids are given a chance to walk freely with their partners inside the boundaries. This distracts the handmaids from the intensive control. Eventually, the handmaids neglect the thought of escaping. Slight freedom is described by

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