Handmaid Tale Essay

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    Everyone does, most of the time. Whatever is going on is as usual. Even this is as usual, now. We lived, as usual, by ignoring. Ignoring isn’t the same as ignorance, you have to work at it.” In the novel The Handmaid’s Tale, written by Margaret Atwood, Atwood’s character Offred, a handmaid, guides the reader through her life in the Republic of Gilead. Through a strategically-placed sequence of events, accompanied by references to animals and inanimate objects to describe human beings, Atwood sculpts the

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    societies have to try to find a balance between gender and class. Margaret Atwood writes about a country called Gilead: a society where women are broken down into classes while men control all the power. Throughout her dystopian novel, The Handmaid's Tale, Atwood utilizes gender and class to alienate the protagonist, Offred, illustrating how women and their position within society are used as a political instrument to gain dominance. Atwood portrays female gender of lacking dominance compared to men

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    “The Handmaid’s Tale” by Magaret Atwood and Celie from “The Color Purple” by Alice Walker oppressed by men, in what ways are their situations similar and how do they deal with the pressure and abuse?” Abstract The purpose of this essay is to look at how the two protagonist women, Offred from “The Handmaid’s Tale” and Celie from “The Color Purple” are treated in literature. This essay aims to answer the question: “How are the two protagonist women Offred from “The handmaid’s tale” and Celie from

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    Handmaid's Tale”. The Novel throughout the book carries almost a nostalgic tone to the past of what the Narrator once had in her life, and that was freedom. Freedom in the the book is a major topic because some citizens in Gilead saying there rights are a blessing and some citizens saying it is corrupt. Margaret Atwood's use

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    The Path We Choose In The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood, focuses on the darker interconnections between politics and sex. The characters she creates are representatives mainly portraying characters though thoughts, statements and actions. In the society of Gilead women are forced to comply with the state's rules in order to produce children; these are their stories. Offred’s thoughts dominate the narration of The Handmaid’s Tale. Her dark humor illustrated here, after being raped by The Commander

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    In The Handmaid's Tale, Margaret Atwood depicts a fictional dystopia in which the American democracy has been overthrown by conservative religious extremists due to dangerously low reproduction rates. To “further” the society and “combat” the birth shortage, the new government implements completely new standards into men and women’s lives. In the book, the protagonist, Offred faces societal standards restricting her ability to love and her education; she reacts passively opposes both standards.

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    In Margret Atwood’s novel, “The Handmaid’s Tale, Offred shares her experience in the Republic of Gilead as a woman stripped of what she once knew and the becoming of a housemaid. As the story begins, we find that the regime strategically encroaches the rights of women, their independence, and seizes anything they thought to be pleasurable deeming it contraband. Offred remembers a time when she was married to her husband Luke with a job and had her own financial backing. However, one day it is altered

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    chapters of Margaret Atwoods “A Handmaid’s Tale”, many thoughts came to mind. The first thing I noticed was the symbolism expressed through the wardrobe the Handmaid’s are forced to wear, which are red dresses that are designated for their role. Red itself represents sin, blood as well as menstruation and fertility: demonstrating the significance of the handmaid’s attire. Next thing I noticed was the loss of identity these women had. In becoming handmaids their identity is stripped from them completely

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    transition. Events such as moving away from home for college or beginning a new job require some time for adjustment. This being the case, many people start off new experiences with a support system behind them. The main character in The Handmaid’s Tale, Offred, must deal with the challenges of a new environment, but she is not embracing a new stage in life. Instead, Offred has been stripped of her freedom and placed under the authority of a man much older than her. She was able to live a “normal”

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    Adding to this theme of oppression in the novel is the symbol of Aunt Lydia’s words resonating in the narrator’s head every time she questions Gilead’s rules. Aunt Lydia was one of the figures of authority during handmaids’ training at the Red Centre. For example, when Offred thinks about knowing what is happening in Gilead, what has happened with those whom she loved, with her family and friends, she says: “Knowing was a temptation. What you don’t know won’t tempt you, Aunt Lydia used to say. Maybe

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