"1984 and the handmaids tale comparison" Essays and Research Papers

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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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    1984: A Cautionary Tale

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    Student’s Name Professor’s Name Course Date 1984 1984 is a cautionary tale. Argue whether or not we‚ as a society‚ have taken his cautions into account. Offer concrete‚ cited‚ examples from today’s world and from the text. Characterized by great democratic advancement‚ the society has taken cautions into account. The novel has been able to carefully narrate and expose the realities of cold wars in our community. The book can demonstrate a genuine meaning of suppression as being the negation of

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    Handmaids

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    text revolves not only around its content‚ but also its language and construction. This notion articulates profoundly within Margaret Atwood’s novel A Handmaid’s Tale as it is‚ after all‚ the author’s manipulation of the language and construction which enacts as vehicles towards the reader’s understanding of the content. A Handmaid’s Tale is a confrontational post-modern work of feminist dystopian fiction; it depicts a protagonist’s struggle to adapt to a totalitarian and theocratic state where language

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    The Commander’s Wife I can almost feel it. Feel my hate‚ disgust‚ yearning. It’s clammy palms are clasped well within my dry‚ aged ones; I was choosing to ignore how the tightness of my grip was spitefully cutting into the youthful flesh. I was choosing to ignore many things. I also wasn’t the only thing cutting into the lament faced mass of bones before me. My eyes reluctantly glanced up to his withered face‚ lines of wisdom and experience coating his physiognomy. A flinch beckoned me to

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    is shatterproof. There is nothing in the room from which one could hang a rope‚ and the door does not lock or even shut completely. Looking around‚ Offred remembers how Aunt Lydia told her to consider her circumstances a privilege‚ not a prison. Handmaids‚ to which group the narrator belongs‚ dress entirely in red‚ except for the white wings framing their faces. Household servants‚ called “Martha’s‚” wear green uniforms. “Wives” wear blue uniforms. Offred often secretly listens to Rita and Cora‚ the

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    Both the novels ’1984’ and ’The Handmaids Tale’ provide warnings of how each author sees certain problems in society leading to dystopian states. Dystopian genres exist in both novels‚ but arise for different reasons. Resulting from Atwood’s concerns about political groups and aspects of feminism; ’The Handmaids Tale’ illustrates how declining birth rates could lead to a state where women are forced into bearing children. In contrast‚ ’1984’ depicts a terror state where poverty is rife and tyrannical

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    Utopia, 1984 Comparison

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    Research Paper: Love in Utopia‚ Brave New World and 1984 Love is without a doubt one of the most powerful emotions in the world. Most people in the world who have experienced this emotion know that with love‚ almost anything is possible. ¡§When in Love‚ the greater is his/her capacity for suffering‚ or anything else in that matter¡¨ (Miguel de Unamuno‚ The Tragic Sense of Life). The governments in both Brave New World and 1984 understand that eliminating love and loyalty is important in their continual

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    fear‚ all of these are key elements in the distopia George Orwell creates in the novel‚ 1984. In this book‚ Orwell creates a society which is based solely on hate and controlled by those who seek only power. Orwell‚ however‚ is not the only author to ponder the possibility of an extreme‚ futuristic society. In particular‚ The Giver‚ by Louis Lowry relates a great deal to the themes found in 1984. Unlike 1984‚ Lowry’s novel focuses on the idea of a utopia as opposed to Orwell’s distopia. What is the

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    1984 And Syme Comparison

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    disconnected from the moderating forces of mainstream society” (1). The same way that outcasts are pushed into a social “no man’s land” is the same way that Syme was pushed out by his peers and seen as a possible heretic. The social exclusion of outcasts in 1984 is very similar to the way outcasts are excluded and “socially vaporized” by teens

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    1984 and Frankenstein: Cautionary Tales George Orwell and Mary Shelley use their works as precautions to potential disasters in society. As Orwell is warning humanity of the hazards of totalitarian rule‚ Shelley is forewarning the danger of science becoming too powerful for mankind’s own good. In 1984‚ Winston fully changes as a character from despising the Party to loving Big Brother. If it was not for the strong pressure to conform inflicted upon him by the Party‚ Winston would never have gained

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