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The Importance of Memory in Margaret Atwood's Handmaid's Tale.

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For this essay I aim to show the importance of memory and of remembering the past in The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood. The Handmaid’s Tale is a ‘speculative fiction’ first published in 1985 but set in the early 2000s. The novel was in response to changes in US politics with the emergence of Christian fundamentalism, the New Right. Atwood believed that society was going wrong and wrote this savage satire, similar to Jonathan Swift’s ‘A Modest Proposal’, depicting a dystopia which she uses as a mirror to hold up to society. I will be focusing on the main character and narrator, Offred, “a handmaid who mingles memories of her life before the revolution with her rebellious activities under the new regime” (book group corner), as she …show more content…

She forgets where she is and remembers her past life as a waitress. The line between fantasizing about the past and the harsh reality of her new life breaks down. She smiles blankly at the other Handmaids and asks them how they are doing. She had a lapse similar to this at the Red Centre where Handmaids were taught how to act in this new regime. Janine’s mental state was frail to begin with and her automatic reaction to scenes of brutality or stress set off her memories of her previous life. Janine’s breakdown shows how memories affect us. Janine cannot handle the deprivation she is now faced with compared to the freedoms of her past.
There is a strong link between memories and hope. Raffaela Baccolini discusses this link in her article "The Persistence of Hope in Dystopian Science Fiction." She says that “Utopia is maintained in dystopia, traditionally a bleak, depressing genre with no space for hope in the story, only outside the story.” Offred does not have much, if anything, to stimulate herself with mentally. She is in a bare room with shatterproof glass that has been ‘made safe’ to prevent her from committing suicide. Her only escape is her mind which harbours her memories. She has no “hope” in her story, which is her life, but she does have hope

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