"The handmaid s tale as a feminist dystopia" Essays and Research Papers

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    Margaret Atwood’s‚ The Handmaid’s Tale‚ constructs a near-future dystopia where human values do not progress and evolve‚ but instead become completely diminished and dominated under the Republic of Gilead. This powerful and secure new government gains complete political control and begins to abuse their power by forcing fertile women to reproduce. The Gileadean society is enforced by many Biblical laws‚ morals‚ and themes‚ yet the Gileadian religious ideologies are based on only a few specifically

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    “Dystopian literature invites the reader to reflect upon the mutability of identity.” By comparing The Handmaid’s Tale and The Road‚ discuss how far‚ and in what ways the two novels support or refute this claim? Within dystopian literature‚ identity is something that can be seen as an individual’s most core and precious element. Exposed against a scarcity of freedom in self-expression‚ we can begin to fully appreciate and understand the importance in the role of identity as well as its robustness

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    David Miller Oppression on Women in Margaret Atwood’s The Handmaid’s Tale and Marjane Satrapi’s Persepolis Marjane Satrapi‚ in Persepolis writes about a memoir of a little girl growing in Iran. She refers to a secular pre-revolutionary time through contrast‚ the oppressive characteristics of the fundamentalist government upon women in specifics. In comparison‚ her work is very similar to Margaret Atwood’s‚ A Handmaid’s Tale‚ in which the central character‚ Offred‚ reflects upon her former life’s

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    Offered’s Lost of Identity The main character of this book is Offered‚ one of the faceless many of the new Republic of Gilead. Each day she is removed farther and farther from her true self‚ to a complete no one. Expected to feel nothing‚ think nothing‚ and want nothing‚ she is used only as an instrument to bear children. Throughout the book‚ the narrator often speaks with a numbed tone despite all the horrifying ordeals she has seen and experienced. Although her offhand comment

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    XXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXX ENGL 252-01 28 November 2012 Thoughts on Feminism and Dystopia in The Handmaid’s Tale The Annotated Bibliography Dopp‚ Jamie. "Subject-Position as Victim-Position in The Handmaid’s Tale." Studies in Canadian Literature / Études en littérature canadienne [Online]‚ 19.1 (1994): n. page. Web. 27 Nov. 2012 Dopp believes that Dopp believes that the goal of The Handmaid’s Tale is to work against the oppression of women‚ While he feels that is actually does the opposite

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    In The Handmaid’s Tale Offred is taught to fear her menstrual cycle due to the fact that the Commander has placed that fear in her by the example of punishing others “Each month I watch for blood‚ fearfully‚ for when it comes it means

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    English – comparing 1984 & The Handmaid’s Tale. In The Handmaid’s Tale Margaret Atwood puts across the sense of mystery‚ things that were once there but are no more. She talks about ‘the pungent smell of sweat‚ shot through with the sweet smell of chewing gum and perfume’ which came from the girls who once watched the basketball matches that were ‘formally played there’. In the first section of this book we get the feeling that the character is quite lost‚ lost in what once was and not in the

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    Torture and fear in the handmaid’s tale. torture noun 1. 1. the action or practice of inflicting severe pain on someone as a punishment or to force them to do or say something‚ or for the pleasure of the person inflicting the pain. The handmaids tale is a novel by Margaret Atwood‚ It describes the life of a woman who is documenting her life as it goes on‚ As the book progresses we are able to see the amount of torture (physical and mental) that the woman of Gilead receive. Offred and other

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    The purpose of a handmaid is to be fertile and bear children but not by their choice. The handmaids are kept in houses along with other women‚ some older‚ some younger‚ and not all handmaids‚ under the supervision and control of a Commander and his wife. Women are also not allowed to read or write and certainly not think‚ say‚ or do anything that could

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    books are so interesting and loved by all because they show us what a future could be if we take the wrong path. Dystopia means literally “bad place.” These are usually imaginary worlds where “present tendencies are carried out to their intensely unpleasant culminations” (Harmon 159-160). It is usually set in the future and a place where few want to live. The authors that write dystopias usually want to warn readers about the possible dangers a future society could present if we stay on our current

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