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Masculinity In The Handmaid's Tale

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This course is entitled Literature and Gender. With gender, there come gender roles and expectations. One of the most explicit expectations of a male is that he exhibits masculine qualities such as power, strength, vigor, and virility. The antagonists in the novels Fight Club, written by Chuck Palahnuik, and The Handmaid’s Tale, written by Margaret Atwood, clearly exhibit masculine qualities. However, in order to achieve a certain level of masculinity, both Tyler Durden in Fight Club, and the Commander in The Handmaid’s Tale sacrifice their integrity and the safety of those around them. Through reading and analyzing both of these novels, it is evident that Tyler Durden and the Commander justify their appalling actions taken against society by …show more content…

He justifies this action when he says that he created Project Mayhem his goal was to “remind these guys what kind of power they still have” (Palahniuk 120). He wants these men to be able to reclaim their masculinity and finally assume the power that they were mean to have in society by getting rid of all of their competition and obstacles in their path to Tyler’s proposed utopia. Another instance of Tyler attempting to justify his actions is when he tells the reader that “Fight Club isn’t real life” and “who guys are in Fight Club is not who they are in the real world” (Palahniuk 49). Tyler hoped and imagined the result of his actions to be was a better world. Unfortunately, manipulation of everyone in his life and the destruction of every obstacle in his way to achieving his “fair” civilization was the avenue that he chose to take in order to get there. One line that perfectly represents Tyler’s justification for his chosen path to utopia is: “Maybe we have to break everything to make something better out of ourselves” (Palahniuk

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