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Prostitution In The Handmaid's Tale

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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

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