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Women In Handmaid's Tale By Margaret Atwood

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In the fictional Gilead, the government expects women to remain the faceless, uneducated, and law-abiding property of a vaguely defined and incredibly powerful government, forcing some women to be Handmaids to fulfil the child-bearing function of society. Although Offred prefers the “freedom of” speech, marriage, dress, and movement given to her in America over the “freedom from” rape, pornography, and extinction that Gilead supposedly provides her, she fails to advocate on behalf of her own beliefs. In Gilead, authority figures see intimate interactions between the sexes as an obstacle to their nebulous war. Doubly obscuring Offred’s sight, Atwood describes men in a “dark-tinted” van wearing “dark glasses” (22). Offred knows that the men in …show more content…

Gilead strips the Handmaids of their given names and replaces them with ones (such as “Offred” or “Ofglen”) to signify the Commanders they serve. Offred loses her identity as an individual person, relabeled for the purpose of identification, just like a prisoner or animal might be numbered for tracking. Only valued for childbearing, Offred must provide children for the government in this repressive, communal society as a Handmaid. Atwood includes the renaming of the protagonist to reveal how the mandated pressure to give birth deprives Offred of her …show more content…

A taped voice of a man reads the Bible to Offred before lunch, exclaiming, “Blessed are the silent” (89). Offred believes that this part of the Bible has been fabricated, but she has no way of verifying this. Attempting to brainwash the Handmaids, the government reads falsified parts of the Bible to women who do not remember the truth, teaching Offred that to stay silent is to stay alive and protected. Moreover, the leaders teach her not to speak up, thus, deteriorating her relationship with God. Worn down by endless propaganda, Offred prays, “Nolite te bastardes carborundorum,” saying she does not know “what else she can say to God” (90). Before knowing the translation, Offred conflates the meaning of this quote with her memories of her rebellious, uproarious friend Moira. Much later, Offred realizes the quote means, “Don’t let the bastards grind you down.” Atwood hides this meaning temporarily, reflecting the relevance of this quote to Offred’s life. Although Offred allows the government to confine her and lie to her, she attempts to make her life bearable by disregarding rules about relations with men during her relationship with Nick. Their relationship, ironically, makes her more willing to stay in the Republic and obey the government. She prefers to survive, not live authentically, and feels satisfied

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