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Feminism In The Handmaid's Tale By Margaret Atwood

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Feminist discourse has existed for decades in our society, especially reaching its pinnacle in the past year with the 2016 presidential election. There has been much debate over whether or not feminism is necessary, though this notion is not new. In fact, it even stretches back to being at the center of political debate in the 1980s, an era featuring Ronald Reagan’s “Reaganomics” and the rise of the Christian Right Movement. This movement exhibited social desires to uphold religious and conservative ideals and aimed to cast out the feminist agenda altogether. The Handmaid’s Tale by Margaret Atwood is a dark fabrication of what could happen if this Christian movement had succeeded in taking over America, exhibiting a pseudo-religious society named Gilead that functions off of submissive women who are merely viewed as wombs for bearing children to those who no longer can biologically reproduce. Thus, it is evident that the morals of Gilead are a reflection of those of the Christian Right Movement. One of the members of the religious movement was American Baptist pastor Jerry Falwell, who, in 1989, claimed (about feminists), “These women just need a man in the house. That’s all they need. Most of the feminists need a man to tell them what time of day it is and to lead them home. And they blew it and they’re mad at all men.” Falwell makes it clear that he disagrees with the feminist agenda, suggesting that feminists only exist to hate men—and that they need a man to be a

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