In this paper, I will argue that Canadian author Margaret Atwood uses fiscal and socially conservative dystopias to show how sex work and prostitution are choices that women would never have to make in a world with true gender equality. In these radically different worlds, women have no agency beyond their sexuality and no ability to express themselves as equals within either society. And while the structures of both societies, the society of The Handmaid’s Tale. They both stem from modern conservative philosophies: for example, the country of Gilead in The Handmaid’s Tale holds Christian conservative beliefs on the role of religion in the state and the culturally designated roles of women. The topic I want to talk is human trafficking, and how women don’t have the freedom they deserve. Now in this book it talks about how women are being forced to have babies for couples who aren’t able to. Women difficulties overcoming sexual discrimination resisting the physical power of male sexuality, and having their sexuality protected and respected. The handmaids are isolated to exclusively sexual duties and their bodies are defiled when they are raped all for the sake of bringing a baby into the world, even if it destroys the very …show more content…
The relationship between sex and power shows how the sexual abuse of the female body, whether it be through childbirth or rape. The handmaids are first kidnapped and forced to become sex slaves by the Aunts, they are then physically held down by the wives during sex, and they are finally penetrated by the unwanted males. This act is not consensual by any means and should have been abhorred as a disgusting crime but is social, and evolutionary necessity. This shows an extreme form of what the rape culture of the 1980s represented. Ideas of rape are further examined in the Particicution, which is the execution of rapists in Gilead by the handmaid’s
In today’s news we see many disruptions and inconsistencies in society, and, according to Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, humankind might be headed in that direction. The deterioration of society is a concept often explored biologically in novels, but less common, is the effect on everyday social constructs such as the position of women as a item that can be distributed and traded-in for a ‘better’ product. The Handmaid’s Tale elaborates the concept that, as societal discrimination towards women intensifies, gender equality deteriorates and certain aspects of societal freedoms are lost. Offred’s experience with serving Gilead demonstrates a victim’s perspective and shows how the occurring changes develope the Republic.
In Margaret Atwood’s, The Handmaid’s Tale she explores the concept of a not-so-distant future where toxic chemicals and abuses to the body have left many men and women alike sterile. The main character, Offred, gives the reader a first person account about her submissive life as a handmaid in the Republic of Gilead. A republic that was formed after a coup against the U.S. government. She and her fellow handmaids are fertile women that the commanders of Gilead ‘enslave’ to ensure their power and to repopulate their ‘society’. While the laws that govern the people of Gilead seem outlandish and oppressive, they are merely
In The Handmaid’s Tale, the Gilead regime oppresses women in many different ways; they take complete control over their bodies, they
The Handmaid's Tale, a film based on Margaret Atwood’s book depicts a dystopia, where pollution and radiation have rendered innumerable women sterile, and the birthrates of North America have plummeted to dangerously low levels. To make matters worse, the nation’s plummeting birth rates are blamed on its women. The United States, now renamed the Republic of Gilead, retains power the use of piousness, purges, and violence. A Puritan theocracy, the Republic of Gilead, with its religious trappings and rigid class, gender, and racial castes is built around the singular desire to control reproduction. Despite this, the republic is inhabited by characters who would not seem out of place in today's society. They plant flowers in the yard, live in suburban houses, drink whiskey in the den and follow a far off a war on the television. The film leaves the conditions of the war and the society vague, but this is not a political tale, like Fahrenheit 451, but rather a feminist one. As such, the film, isolates, exaggerates and dramatizes the systems in which women are the 'handmaidens' of today's society in general and men in particular.
The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood is set in a future time period where the United States is under the control of the Gileadean regime. A terrorist attack leads to the collapse of Congress, the suspension of the Constitution, and the establishment of a theocratic totalitarian government. Men and women are given roles within society; they are Commanders, Eyes, Handmaids, and Marthas. In this novel, Atwood explores a prominent social issue, feminism. The suppression and power of women are examined through the setting and characterization of the novel to help understand the meaning of the novel as a whole.
Thomas C. Foster, in his novel, How to Read Literature Like a Professor, gives many examples of sex being shown symbolically in literature. He imparts in the reader an idea that sex is everywhere in a typical novel, and that many details in a work-- most details, even-- are representative of sex: “Tall buildings? Male sexuality. Rolling landscapes? Female sexuality. Stairs? Sexual intercourse. Falling down stairs? Oh my” (Foster 136). And, yes-- sex is truly everywhere in The Handmaid’s Tale. The importance of sex in the dystopian society known as “Gilead” is huge; sex is what the entire Gileadian regime is based around-- reproduction, more specifically. Symbols of fertility
In the Gilead society the handmaids have to cover up their bodies, wear long dresses, and cover their faces with vial’s and wings. These rules for the women are the same if not similar in Afghanistan, India, and some south Asian countries. In Pakistan women can be raped and if no evidence is found to prove it was rape the men could get away with it and the women could be charged with pre-marital sex and sentence to prison. This is similar in The Handmaid’s Tale; the handmaids go through “the ceremony” as they call it. The handmaids had to lay on their backs once a month in hope to become impregnated by the commander. The handmaids are valued only for their womb, ovaries, and reproducing. If their ovaries were no good or if they couldn’t have children for any other reason, then the handmaid was not valued or not needed and was sent to “the club” where all the unclean, no use of handmaids are. The handmaids with valuable ovaries are alive only to serve a purpose which is to reproduce.
In Margaret Atwood’s, The Handmaid’s Tale, the idea of women’s bodies as political instruments and elimination of sexual pleasure is explored. The republic of Gilead “depicts a futuristic society in which a brutal patriarchal regime deprives women of power and subjectivity, enslaving them through a sophisticated, ubiquitous apparatus of surveillance” (Cooper 49). Offred is a “girl” who lives with her commander within Gilead. She is surrounded by girls at his house. When one becomes a woman they have had a baby. Any time before they have a baby they are just girls. They are valued only by their ovaries and wombs. They have no freedom
There was not only one but two main social values to this story which included lust and how cunningness can go hand in hand with evil, otherwise known as lies and deceit in this case. Nicholas and Absolon had a strong sexual desire for Alisoun. While it seems John did not use Alisoun for lust only, those were the only intentions of Absolon and Nicholas. Alisoun falls for the tricks of Nicholas, not because she is naive but because she has the same desire Nicholas has for her. “‘Myn housbonde is so full of jalousye/
Margaret Atwood’s harrowing novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, follows the story of a woman marginalized by the theocratic oligarchy she lives in; in the Republic of Gilead, this woman has been reduced to a reproductive object who has her body used to bear children to the upper class. From the perspective of the modern reader, the act of blatant mistreatment of women is obvious and disturbing; however, current life is not without its own shocking abuses. Just as the Gileadian handmaid was subject to varied kinds of abuse, many modern women too face varied kinds of abuses that include psychological, sexual, and financial abuse.
Human trafficking Human trafficking is practice of illegally transporting people from one area to another its purpose of forced labor or any other sexual exploitation. It’s crazy because human trafficking has been happening since the 1400s, it has been on the news everywhere, all television and there is books about human trafficking you can read about to get more information i would consider you read a book called “ The Handmaids tales “ it’s about a young woman who was taken from her own life and she was forced to have sex with different kinds of strangers because of the birth decline in that generation.
Handmaids are made to believe that they are important yet they are used as sexual tools. “Women in this context do not own their bodies because their bodies belong to the commanders” (139). Any decision regarding sex is made by the commanders while the wives are being asked to take care of the handmaids. With deep thoughts of depression, the handmaid’s think they’re nothing. They believe that they are just used for sex.
The handmaid’s only use is to bare children for the men of power. They are not viewed as a person of value and are instead labelled as a job. “Handmaid’s,” as they are known, is only a title, one that rarely reflects the human and person who bears it. Only seen as a step to more power they are subjected to many violations of privacy and rights. For instance, a handmaid is not allowed to shut her door or be left to bathe by themselves.
As the strange traditions and laws present in Gilead are portrayed, the reader is able to see the effects oppressive policies can have on the thoughts and actions of the characters as they find ways of escaping the conformity forced upon them. Atwood’s creates a dark dystopia with reactive characters to reveal that even in the face of oppression, individuals will find ways of quietly expressing their identities, and the bravest individuals might even choose the freedom of death over oppression. The Handmaid’s Tale serves as a painful consideration into the effects of tyranny on the
A Critical Analysis of “The Handmaid’s Tale.” In this dystopia novel, it reveals a remarkable new world called Gilead. “The Handmaid’s Tale,” by Margaret Atwood, explores all these themes about women who are being subjugated to misogyny to a patriarchal society and had many means by which women tried to gain not only their individualism and their own independence. Her purpose of writing this novel is to warn of the price of an overly zealous religious philosophy, one that places women in such a submissive role in the family. I believe there are also statements about class in there, since the poor woman are being meant to serve the rich families need for a child. As the novel goes along the narrator Offred is going between the past and