Essay On The Handmaid's Tale By Margaret Atwood

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A tyrannical society is created when skewed religious values and political forces combine and overpower future America in Atwood’s science fiction novel. In The Handmaid’s Tale, Margaret Atwood grimly illustrates the detrimental effects of an oppressive theocratic government and juxtaposes the flaws of modern day society to a dystopian totalitarian regime. The subjugation of women is as prevalent today and in history as it is throughout the novel. Women are the main victims in the dystopia Atwood constructs and her vision of this society reflects many of the inequalities and abuses endured by women worldwide, in the past and currently. In the novel “...they decided that even names of shops were too much temptation for us [handmaids]. Now …show more content…

Certain countries such as Cambodia, Pakistan, and Nepal still have laws prohibiting women from the right to an education, and the rate of illiteracy and lack of education remains a severe impediment to the advancement of women in these nations (Moss and Wilson). Another prevailing issue that occurs in Atwood’s misogynistic world and mirrors today’s society is the tendency for women to oftentimes be prone to victim blaming after sexual assault. In the novel women are programmed to blame themselves and blame other women for cases of rape. The narrator, Offred, recalls “...Janine, telling about how she was gang-raped at fourteen and had an abortion… But whose fault was it? … Her fault, her fault, her fault, we chant in unison” (Atwood 72). This scene emphasizes the adversity many women deal with worldwide. All around women are accused of leading rapists on by what they wear, how they look, and even in some countries like India, laws allowing for marital rape are legal (Swale). Another controversial topic apparent in today’s society is government control over women’s bodies. In Gilead, the theocratic government controls women’s lives in

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