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The Handmaid's Tale Essay

Decent Essays

“The woman who fights against the constrictions that society places upon her is a common figure in texts with female protagonists”
Compare and contrast the ways in which your three chosen texts either support or challenge this view.

W.M. Thackeray’s “Vanity Fair” (1847), Margaret Atwood’s “The Handmaid’s Tale” (1985), and Dame Carol Ann Duffy’s “The World’s Wife” (1999), demonstrate that, regardless of time, form, and authorship, the woman who fights against the constrictions that society places upon her is a common figure in texts with female protagonists. Becky Sharp, Offred, and the “forgotten” women of The World’s Wife, all experience restrictions. Here their restrictions by poverty, silencing, and literary suppression will be discussed, …show more content…

Thackeray’s language is a thematic revelation; the title Vanity Fair shows the novel is satire, being a phrase taken from Bunyan’s Christian allegory A Pilgrim’s Progress, which criticises materialistic obsession. The protagonist’s name, Becky Sharp, is similarly used. “Sharp” directly relates to Becky’s characterisation and liberation - Becky fights against the constrictions of her society with her cunning and malleability, the characteristics which earn her the name “Sharp”, shown in the early chapters by rebellions such as throwing the dictionary back at her schoolmistress Miss Jemima, and her determination to seal a marriage with Joss Sedley. Sharpness liberates Becky, but takes away her femininity and presents her as male; she later demonstrates many actions that are liberating but traditionally masculine, like gambling and taking financial control, something denied to other women in the text - Jane Osbourne lives in poverty as her gender restricts her access to her wealth. I agree with A. Moya, who believes that “[Becky] subverts the Victorian ideal of femininity to impersonate the female masculine, a man (in cultural terms) in a woman’s

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