Handmaid's Tale Essay

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    The Handmaid's Tale Essay

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    The oppression of women throughout Margaret Atwood’s novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, exists in a dystopian society, mirroring the climate of the period it was written, and in actuality, may not be too far off the path from where we are now. Atwood’s portrayal of this misogynistic culture that subjugates women to second class citizens is a book worthy of AP merit due to the social impact, universal appeal, and timelessness of Offred’s story that does not fail to seamlessly connect the issues of generations

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    The Handmaid’s Tale is similar and relatable to Gender equity/inequity because this book talks about how Men and women aren’t equal. Males tend to have more power over females. The women are referred to Handmaid’s which are also known to take care and breed children. They aren’t allowed to read or write. This honestly is a problem towards society. These women have no hope to stick up for themselves because they get executed if they try to get free from a place run by Men. The Handmaid’s Tale is such

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    Regardless of Atwood's aversion of the name, woman's rights and level headed discussions inside the women's activist development assume a focal part in The Handmaid's Tale. For instance, women's activist perspectives on marriage vary. A few women's activists trust that marriage is a patriarchal establishment that is inalienably misanthropic. Others trust that the way of marriage is advancing into a relationship of equivalents. In the novel, Offred's marriage to Luke depends on adoration and shared

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    Interpreting The Handmaid's Tale The Handmaid's Tale is distinguished by its various narrative and structural divisions. It contains four different levels of narrative time: the pre-Revolution past, the time of the Revolution itself, the Gileadean period, and the post-Gileadean period (LeBihan 100). In addition, the novel is divided into two frames, both with a first person narrative. Offred's narrative makes up the first frame, while the second frame is provided by the Historical Notes, a transcript

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    author of The Handmaid’s Tale, stated this quote in her novel, as she heard it as a joke in her school. However, in this novel, this quote holds greater meaning than being a joke. The Handmaid’s Tale is a dystopian novel written by Margaret Atwood in 1985, but the novel has gained a lot of attention recently after the last elections. Most of the people must have heard the word “feminism” before, but maybe not everyone understood it. The author says in her essay that The Handmaid’s Tale can be a feminist

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    Secondly, in The Handmaid's Tale, there are secret police in the Republic of Gilead called the Eyes. The Eyes are responsible for maintaining law and order and rooting out traitors of the government. No one knows exactly what they look like because anyone could be an Eye, as all of them are undercover spies. Eyes are also responsible for interrogating and arresting suspects, as well as it is implied that they torture and kill suspects if they are not compliant. When Offred is out walking to a shop

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    Margaret Atwood's tale of a concubine engulfs the reader in a chilling effect on what could be our future America. The Handmaid’s Tale reveals the story of June, but her name has been altered to Offred. The patronymic was enforced by the new regime in a burdensome parallel of an impeding America. The Handmaid's roles include providing children for the infertile women of the upper class. The female population is divided into classes established by household functions. The Eye is a secret police group

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    Resistance Futile? What do The Handmaid’s Tale and The Crucible suggest about the nature of resisting and rebelling against social order? Margaret Atwood’s, The Handmaid’s Tale, and Arthur Miller’s ,The Crucible, explore the consequences surrounding the nature of resisting and rebelling against social order. Resistance the refusal to accept or comply with something or to actively and passively fight against something. Atwood’s new government of Gilead in The Handmaid’s Tale enforces unthinkable oppression

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    “[takes] stupid chances,” but emphasizes that their relationship is not “for him, but for [her]self entirely” (Atwood 268). Offred is willing to risk her life with Nick because “her love for him neutralizes her intense fear of punishment” (“The Handmaid’s Tale” 122). Atwood includes the liaison between Offred and Nick to draw attention to the human propensity toward sexual companionship regardless of laws that might be in place to prevent such relationships. The idea that love can prevail over societal

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    The Handmaid’s Tale additionally brings the biology perspective on rape into the novel. The explanation for the commander having, what is basically forced, sex with Offred is for reproductive purposes in order to populate the society. The novel even brings in the social cultural view of rape culture as well by showing us that the commander also wanted “forced” sex for other reasons such as lust or romance. Therefore, making the novel’s approach more combine, similarly to Owen D. Jones. The Handmaid’s

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