Comparing The Handmaid's Tale And The Road

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The Dystopian Worlds of The Handmaid’s Tale and The Road The worlds of The Handmaid’s Tale and The Road are complete opposites; One is an anarchical society where there is no societal structure while the other is a very well-structured world with a thoroughly defined hierarchy. Despite this, it could be argued that these two worlds are simultaneously also very similar due to the way they approach the topics of patriarchy, misogyny, and survival. Atwood and McCarthy accomplish this differently, but they achieve it using the same literary techniques and, despite one of the worlds being dystopian while the other is post-apocalyptic, making heavy usage of descriptive writing. Both authors create worlds rife with misogyny that expose the problems …show more content…

The woman walked with a waddling gait and as she approached he could see that she was pregnant” (McCarthy 173). My belief is furthered when we take into account that the catamites are kept for sexual intercourse as the descriptor used implies. Ergo, if the women being kept are not needed for sexual intercourse, their only purpose must be for procreation akin to the handmaids in The Handmaid’s Tale. A further way these two books are alike is the way they approach the topic of survival in a post-apocalyptic or dystopian society. They both tackle suicide and children as a means of coping in much the same way. In Gilead, many handmaids commit suicide as an escape of their new bleak reality. For instance, Offred’s predecessor–who most probably was the one that wrote “nolite te bastardes carborundorum” after learning it from her oppressor–committed suicide. Offred herself comes to the same conclusion in this passage: “I force a smile, but it’s all before me now. I can see why she wrote that, on the wall of the cupboard, but I also see that she must have learned it, here, in this room. Where else? She was never a schoolboy. With him, during some previous period of

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