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Essay On Non Existentialism In A Handmaid's Tale

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Every day people are put in many situations where they will have to make important decisions. In the present day, people understand the difference between right and wrong, virtuous or vicious, blaming others or accepting one's fate. Non-existentialism is blaming outside forces for what the person has really done. This is prominent in Margaret Atwood’s, A Handmaid's Tale. Characters in A Handmaid's Tale live in a non-existentialist society where the character Offred, is influenced by many external forces that help shape her as a character, as well as the story. Firstly, religion is a key aspect of the story that shows non-existentialism. Offred lives in a very religious town that always turns to God. When bad things start to happen in her …show more content…

This shows how she is non-existential because she blames others rather than herself for something that she didn’t plan properly. Most importantly, Offred blames her family getting caught on God because she says that God was watching her that day with an evil eye. She believes that God desires so much evil for her and her family and that He wants them to get separated. She begins to pray, asking to be reunited with her family. Once Offred and her daughter got caught they were separated, bringing Offred to the Red Center. She never saw Luke or her daughter again. Throughout the book, she daydreams about old memories she had with Luke. She thinks that it was a signal from God that He will reunite. Offred quickly loses faith in God when, after years of waiting, she still never saw Luke. She believes that living a terrible life was God’s punishment for her since she was mad and blamed Him for taking her away from her family.
"Dear God, I think, I will do anything you like. Now that you've let me off, I'll obliterate myself, if that is what you really want; I'll empty myself, truly, become a chalice. I'll give up Nick, I'll forget about the others.” (Atwood 286).
This quote shows Offred, returning to God and apologizing to Him after turning away from Him. The reader is able to see how truly sincere she is about losing her trust in God when she says,

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