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What Is The Loss Of Freedom In The Handmaid's Tale

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In a world which she defined as ‘social science fiction’, Margaret Atwood brings clarity and life to a situation many would deem unimaginable. Those who immerse themselves in her novel are still able to see it as a dystopian society and thus detach themselves from the text itself. The readers comprehend the apparent loss of freedom and pain that the characters go through and have the knowledge that they exist outside of this story; its happenings will not affect them. This very phenomenon is introduced in The Handmaid’s Tale when the main character recalls a time before the fall of society as they knew it. Regarding the stories in the newspaper, the main character says that “We were the people who were not in the papers. We lived in the …show more content…

She as a person is able to carry on normally in her everyday life without being affected by the killings and horrors around them. The main character and her family are not a part of the stories, their lives exist on a relatively separate spectrum. By using the term ‘we’, the author is stating literally the main character and her friend and immediate family, but in a more liberal use of the word she is referring to those who have the luxury of sitting back and allowing their life to continue as is, uninterrupted. They “…lived in the blank white spaces at the edge of the print,” (57) untouched and unmarred. By being able to detach themselves from what was happening in society, “It gave [them] more freedom.” (57) Freedom to continue living life as they had before, freedom to ignore the stories that were unimaginable, “…too melodramatic, they had a dimension that was not the dimension of our lives,” (57). When the character sees herself as having “…lived in the gap between stories,” (57) she is referring to how their ordinary lives do not fit in with what the newspapers are reporting but are in fact the in-between, the ordinary tales that occur between the newsworthy

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