preview

Oppression Of Women In The Handmaid's Tale By Margaret Atwood

Good Essays

Nothing is more tragic to remember than the horrors of the past like the Holocaust or other events where people have been oppressed. The redemption of society is the ability to learn from past mistakes and to never repeat history. However, this requires that society be capable of recognizing the parallels between the present and the past and see the flaws reemerging. Without this, there is nothing to stop the corrupt individuals or groups from taking control and influencing others. In dystopian novel The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood demonstrates the awful effect of the oppression of women by showcasing the reaction of the handmaids and their desperate struggle to survive in the face of hypocritical manipulation and dehumanization as sex slaves for the government. The narrative features natural shifts triggered by Offred’s, the protagonist, train of thought emotionally which helps the reader identify and empathize with the characters. The initial description of the girls’ predicament emphasizes the hopelessness of their situation as their every move is controlled and monitored. The violent, controlling manner which the Aunts reign over the other women is terrifying, with their “electric cattle prods slung on thongs from their leather belts” (Atwood 4). Critic Beauchamp identifies quickly in his work “The Politics of The Handmaid’s Tale” that the setting of the novel is “a theocracy, a right-wing, fundamentalist Christian theocracy” (12). The language included in the

Get Access