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    Moira is the embodiment of rebellion and individualism. Moira’s function in the novel is a role model for Offred and serves as a part of Offred’s conscience. The reader can infer from Offred’s monologues that she, to some extent, wants to be a feminist like Moira. Moira also represents the hope and courage that other Handmaids wish to have. Moira’s key role was to give the reader and the characters in the book a glimpse of the other end of the spectrum of this dystopia. During their younger years

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    Margaret Atwood’s, The Handmaid’s Tale, speculates the reconstructed Republic of Gilead as it changes from a commonplace, modern society into a closed, dystopic society in which “misogynistic laws and tendencies are responsible for reducing women to the level of objects” (Chadha 33). The handmaids abide by these strict laws and serve their commander, or risk being severely beaten or tortured on parts of their bodies that are not essential to procreation as their female oppressor Aunt Lydia reminds

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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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    Offred is very limited in where she can go because of position in her society and the Eye. But she still has a choice to obey or disobey. Offred is very aware of the consequences of disobedience, so she does what she’s told. She obeys her Commander because to disobeying would be far too dangerous for her. However, it almost seems as if she’s accepted her fate and chooses to remain in her situation. As the novel goes on Offred is presented with more power. Her Commander wants to start an intimate

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    Parents typically don’t want their children reading in depth books about sex; however, The Handmaid’s Tale offers great fictional examples that teach sexism and the mistreatment of women, yet these examples can lead some in the wrong way. Therefore depending on the view in society, The Handmaid’s tale should be banned or kept to certain areas of the world because of the unfair treatment of women. The Handmaid’s Tale is about Offered as she shares her thoughts and experiences in a journal-like form

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    In Margaret Atwood's fictional novel, The Handmaid’s Tale, set in a dystopian society, the character of Offred is a ‘handmaid’ assigned to a high-ranking Commander and his wife. Atwood’s explanation of the novel in her ‘Introduction’ categorizes The Handmaid’s Tale as a “feminist novel” (xv). Through Offred’s struggle to rationalize her transgressions, which lead to her imprisonment, Atwood challenges feminists’ conceptions of idealistic worlds. Feminists believe that women have both the right to

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    Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale is a futuristic dystopian novel set in the Republic of Gilead, once Massachusetts. Because of a decline in fertility and birth rates, the government took major action, creating the gender-segregated Gilead, a “profound power structure for suppressing women” (Klarer 151). Gilead created an “atmosphere of male domination” (Hammer), and “institutionalized control of the female population ‘for breeding purposes’” (Green 14). Since The Handmaid’s Tale is a story of

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    The Handmaids Tale by Margaret Atwood is a story of fiction that takes place in a future where the ability to reproduce healthy babies is scarce. The novel focuses on a future where traditional values are strictly enforced by a totalitarian government leaving women powerless. This dystopia touches upon several aspects of life that shape society such as religion, government, gender roles, equality and more. Margaret elaborates on the outcome of a society that solely depends on traditional roles and

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    A once normal society is taken over by high ranking, religious men, who create a society that ideally fits their beliefs on how a society should be. The book, The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood is a science-fiction novel told in a first person narrative by the main character, Offred. Offred lived in a dystopian society called Gilead, where she was a Handmaid and her sole purpose was to have children for wives that could not have kids. As the story progresses you can see that everyone is the story

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    Imagine a world where identity is stripped away, something as basic as your name is taken and replaced for another showing that you are no longer your own individual you are now property.In the novel The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood tells of hardships endured by Offred, a young woman, whose only task in life is to bear children. In this dystopian world, the government has fallen, the world is plagued in nuclear waste, and the population has substantially dropped due to infertility. As a result

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