Handmaid's Tale Essay

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    The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood explores how societies, such as Gilead, exist as a result of complacency as the novel serves as a cautionary tale to future societies. Through ‘The Historical Notes’, Atwood explores the continuation of patriarchy and how the female voice is constantly undermined by the male gaze. Dominick Grace’s analysis of ‘The Historical Notes’ ‘questions … the authenticity’ of Offred’s account as it relies purely on the reliability of memories, which are subjective. The

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    In the novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, the author Margaret Atwood depicts a future where a majority of women are infertile. For the ones that can convince children become handmaids.They become owned by the men they try to convince with. It so difficult to have children because the world is polluted with toxins. Abortions are outlawed, adultery is not tolerated, kind of, pollution, and discrimination have positive and negative affects on the social progression in The Handmaid's Tale. Abortion is a big

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    Margaret Atwood’s book The Handmaid's Tale is a book of prophecy, foreshadowing to events that could happen years after it was published. The way Atwood describes the events leading to the government was overthrown by Gilead has concepts that were not something just anyone could foresee happening. She describes a system that undergoes a major social change by using a revolutionary social movement to radically change a culture, which can be compared to other cultures who recently went through major

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    realisation that the future is contingent on the present, and can be affected by something we do or don't do now." Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale (1985) is a dystopian text set in the near future that details the workings of totalitarian state Gilead, a republic founded upon Christian fundamentalism and the disempowerment of women. The Handmaid's Tale explores the contribution of misogyny and religion in the creation of dystopia and warns of the potential for a dystopia to come about from

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    Women Bodies as Political Instruments “Women Used and Abused for the sake of Bearing Children” Margaret Atwood’s, The Handmaid’s Tale, is a tale based out of Gilead where religious conservatives have taken over. Their belief is that the decline in birthrates in Gilead is due to the women and their infertility because, “there is no such thing as a sterile man anymore, not officially. There are only women who are fruitful and women who are barren, that’s the law” (Atwood 61). In this society, feminism

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    Margaret Atwood uses a variety of different ways to achieve the marginalization of women in her book The Handmaid’s Tale. The novel creates an entirely new social construct and redefines language to create the marginalization of women. Heavily relying on narrative voice, the novel unravels Gilead, a city set in a dystopian future where women are nothing more than objects. Men are the only ones who are ascribed to authority while women are marginalized as subordinates. The novel was written in 1985

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    Olivia Dewberry Professor Shoemake ENGL 1102-100 10 May 2017 Word Count:1258 The repetition of history in The Handmaid’s Tale In Margaret Atwood’s, The Handmaid’s Tale she explores the concept of a not-so-distant future where toxic chemicals and abuses to the body have left many men and women alike sterile. The main character, Offred, gives the reader a first person account about her submissive life as a handmaid in the Republic of Gilead. A republic that was formed after a coup against the U.S.

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    different worlds, women have no agency beyond their sexuality and no ability to express themselves as equals within either society. And while the structures of both societies, the society of The Handmaid’s Tale. They both stem from modern conservative philosophies: for example, the country of Gilead in The Handmaid’s Tale holds Christian conservative beliefs on the role of religion in the state and the culturally designated roles of women. The topic I want to talk is human trafficking, and how women don’t

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    The Handmaid’s Tale: That Ain’t no Way to Treat a Lady Notorious rapper Chris Brown has been recorded saying, “My mother taught me to treat a lady respectfully” (BrainyQuote). As much as irony as is contained in that statement, there is even more when it is applied to Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale, a dystopian society so rife with the poisoning effects of radiation and so desperate for children that it treats fertile women as reproductive objects, with no care or concern about how this may

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    The women in The Handmaid’s Tale, by Margaret Atwood, and in Room, by Emma Donoghue, experience many horrors at the expense of male incel and are forced to adhere to dreadful situations to survive captivity and protect their oblivious children. Both Offred and Ma experience physical and emotional trauma while enduring the on-slot of sexual and psychological abuse from their captors. The antagonistic men portray different mediums of toxic masculinity and male aggression. Throughout both novels, the

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