Handmaid's Tale Essay

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    The Handmaid’s Tale, gives us an insight into Gilead’s ideologies that drive patriarchy and theocracy where women have become complacent because of their oppressed nature. Our understanding can be found in the limited information to what is written in the novel as we only hear about Offred’s experience throughout the Gilead’s regime. Therefore, this challenges the reliability of truth as we don’t have any other background information about Gilead’s world. The “Historical Notes” demonstrates the limitation

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    In the dystopian novel, The Handmaid’s Tale written by Margaret Atwood, tells a story of a woman named Offred living as a Handmaid in the Republic of Gilead. With Gilead being a brand new state, their grasp on power is not completely stable. In order for them to secure their power in their theocratic state, they control and manipulate the use of language by modifying the names of those who holds high authority, regulating the usage of language within their society, and annihilating the written language

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    Written in 1985, the dystopian, fictional novel; The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood depicts a totalitarian theocracy society set in the United States of America that covers many facets of being a modern woman in this patriarchal world, that range from domestic/dating violence, sexual assault, to less-involved topics. Though the novel was originally published in the year 1985, its’ explicit scenes draw an eerie image of what the future may look for women following the election of President Donald

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    In the novel The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood depicts a near-future world in which Christian theonomy has overthrown the United States Government, and all of the women’s rights are taken from them. The novel is told from the perspective of a woman who is living in the new world and how she survives it, as well as how she ended up in this horrendous position. Atwood’s novel has been read by millions of individuals throughout the years, leaving many with different perspectives on it. This critical

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    At What Cost? Everything comes at a price, but the question is how much are you willing to pay? In Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaids Tale, the audience experiences living in a world where free-will is the ultimate sacrifice. Offred — the protagonist and from whose point of view the story is being told — walks us through her day-to-day life of living in the theocratic dystopian society that is Gilead. Offred reveals the severity of the conditions of women through her use of flashbacks, affirms her own

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    It is a wonder at how humans, subconsciously or consciously, naturally conform and accept their environment. In the novel, the abnormal lifestyles of the characters become the ordinary in the absence of an escape towards normality. When one encounters new situations, it is of human nature to convert these unfamiliar experiences into habitual activities to rid the discomfort of abnormality and feel at ease. To survive, Offred and other characters within the society of Gilead must conform to the lifestyle

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    society could fall apart. Parts of these societies are normalized through systemic transformation such as removing women’s rights to own money then transitioning into assigning certain women as surrogate child bearers. In Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale, the controversial aspects of the totalitarian Gilead are explored in Offred's first person narrative to reveal the idea that even with a loss of faith in a compromising situation, one must cling to hope. In Offred’s first person narrative, Atwood

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    Both in the Handmaid's Tale and in real life; women are denied of their rightful rights. It is still happening till this day in parts of the world. In the book women are not allowed to read, like in some cultures in today’s world too. Also in the book the women must always be escorted. Must always be in pairs of 2. Kinda like the muslim culture, like how the women must always be escorted my men everywhere. Women are also not allowed to hold a position with power in the Handmaid’s Tale. Like in some

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    Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale explores the theocratic dystopia of the Republic of Gilead, a society founded on ultra-religious, misogynistic and patriarchal principles. Dwindling birth rates spearheaded the totalitarian usurp of a once democratic nation. Overall, society transformed from one which embraced gender equality to one which devalued women and stripped them of their basic rights. These power mongers successfully manipulated the citizens of Gilead by employing three key tactics,

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    Summary of Argument: For my IOP topic, I will write an epilogue of sorts for The Handmaid’s Tale that mimics the style and structure Atwood uses in the novel. My epilogue will include key literary techniques that are prominent throughout the book such as stream of consciousness, flashbacks, biblical allusions, and the use of second person. Justification: I plan for my epilogue to focus on the events that occur after the ending of the book, specifically what happens to Offred once she is taken from

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